Gold remains one of the market’s most closely watched defensive assets, particularly during periods of inflation uncertainty, geopolitical tension and shifting central-bank expectations. One of the most important drivers behind gold prices is the direction of real yields. As investors reassess inflation-adjusted returns in bond markets, the balance between holding yield-generating assets and defensive assets like gold becomes increasingly important.
Interest-rate expectations remain one of the biggest drivers of currency markets in 2026. For EUR/USD, the focus is increasingly centred on the policy gap between the European Central Bank and the US Federal Reserve. As investors reassess inflation, growth and the timing of future rate decisions, shifts in yield differentials continue to shape both sentiment and price action across the world’s most traded currency pair.
While major US equity indices often move in the same overall direction, the types of stocks leading the market can shift noticeably over time. Traders watch these leadership changes closely because they often reveal how confident investors are about taking on risk.
In recent weeks, both the Nasdaq 100 and the S&P 500 have moved higher, but they have not risen at the same pace. The Nasdaq 100, with its heavier exposure to technology and growth stocks, has been climbing faster, while the broader S&P 500 has lagged slightly. This split performance can offer useful insight into market leadership and overall sentiment.
WTI crude oil has rebounded after a sharp selloff toward the low $80s, raising an important question for traders: is this the start of a broader recovery, or simply a temporary bounce?