1) 📊 Last Week in Review
Week ending 1 May 2026
Performance snapshot:
- FTSE 100: 10,363.93 | -0.1% (YTD +4.4%)
- S&P 500: 7,230.12 | +0.9% (YTD +5.6%)
- MSCI World: 4,674.25 | +0.9% (YTD +6.1%)
- UK 10y gilt yield: 4.97% | US 10y: 4.38% (+6.9bp)
- GBP/USD: 1.3606 (+1.0%) | Brent: $108.17 (+2.7%)
What moved markets:
- US earnings beat expectations, with S&P 500 Q1 earnings growth now seen near 27.8%, helping equities ignore much of the geopolitical noise.
- Oil remained the swing factor. Brent spiked above $120 intrweek before settling near $108, keeping inflation risk alive.
- Central banks stayed cautious, with the BoE, Fed, ECB and BoJ all recently holding rates while warning that energy prices could change the path.
Sector & style:
- Best sector: Technology led in the US, helped by AI and mega-cap earnings.
- Worst sector: Energy lagged late in the week as crude fell back from its spike.
- Growth vs Value: Mixed. Big tech helped growth, but the broader market also saw better breadth.
- Large vs Small: Small caps joined the rally; the Russell 2000 rose 0.9% last week.
2) 🌟 The Defining Narrative
Will Friday’s US payrolls confirm a labour market slowdown that forces the Fed’s hand — or defer the pivot yet again?
April payrolls consensus sits at just 60,000 (vs. 178,000 in March), the slowest pace in years, partly reflecting Iran-war uncertainty on business hiring. A weak print would revive rate-cut hopes, supporting bonds and growth stocks — but only if inflation pressures from energy don’t simultaneously worsen. The Fed’s 4-way dissent last week means any surprise in either direction could trigger outsized market moves.
- Confirms narrative: Payrolls below 60k + modest wage growth → yields fall, dollar weakens, risk-on
- Breaks narrative: Payrolls beat 150k or wages accelerate → pushes Fed cut pricing further out, yields spike
UK investor angle:
- Weaker US payrolls → GBP/USD likely rallies (dollar softens), which reduces returns from unhedged US equities; gilts would likely rally too on global rates relief
- Strong payrolls + sticky inflation → dollar strength, gilt yields remain elevated, UK portfolio faces dual pressure
3) 🏦 Central Bank Watch
Federal Reserve
- What’s scheduled: Fed speakers on Tuesday 5 May and Friday 8 May; US Senior Loan Officer Survey on Monday 4 May, 19:00 UK time.
- Market pricing: CME FedWatch showed an 83.8% probability that rates stay unchanged through 2026; separate reporting showed a 94.9% probability of a June hold.
- Key thing to listen for: Whether officials describe the next move as two-sided — cut or hike — rather than easing-biased.
- UK implications: Hawkish Fed language would support the dollar and pressure global bonds; softer language would help risk assets.
BoE / ECB / BoJ
No major scheduled central bank catalysts this week. The next BoE MPC decision is 18 June 2026; the ECB’s next monetary-policy meeting is in June, and the BoJ has just held rates at 0.75%.
4) 🌍 Macro Calendar
| Day (UK) | Region Event | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Mon 4 May | UK market closed — Early May Bank Holiday | Lower UK liquidity; Wall Street remains open. |
| Mon 4 May, 15:00 | US factory orders | Checks whether manufacturing strength is real or stockpiling. |
| Mon 4 May, 19:00 | Fed Senior Loan Officer Survey | Shows whether banks are tightening credit. |
| Tue 5 May, 05:30 | RBA rate decision | A test case for how central banks react to oil-led inflation. |
| Tue 5 May, 15:00 | US ISM Services PMI | Services drive the US economy; prices paid matter for inflation. |
| Tue 5 May, 15:00 | US JOLTS job openings | Shows labour-market heat before payrolls. |
| Wed 6 May, 02:45 | China Services PMI | A read on Chinese domestic demand and global growth. |
| Wed 6 May, 09:30 | UK Services PMI | Key UK growth gauge; services drive the economy. |
| Wed 6 May, 13:15 | US ADP employment | Early clue for Friday’s payrolls. |
| Thu 7 May, 07:00 | Germany factory orders | Signals whether European industry is stabilising. |
| Thu 7 May, 09:30 | UK Construction PMI | Useful read on housing, infrastructure and rate sensitivity. |
| Fri 8 May, 13:30 | US non-farm payrolls | The week’s main event for yields, dollar and equities. |
| Fri 8 May, 15:00 | US Michigan sentiment / inflation expectations | Inflation expectations matter while oil is elevated. |
5) 📊 Earnings Watch
US
- Palantir (PLTR) — Monday:
- What matters: AI platform demand.
- The tell headline: Commercial growth accelerates again.
- Read-across: AI software appetite.
- AMD (AMD) — Tuesday:
- What matters: Data-centre GPU revenue.
- The tell headline: AI chip guidance beats.
- Read-across: Semiconductors and AI capex.
- Pfizer (PFE) — Tuesday:
- What matters: Drug pipeline and cost control.
- The tell headline: Margin recovery.
- Read-across: Healthcare defensives.
- Disney (DIS) — Wednesday:
- What matters: Parks, streaming margins.
- The tell headline: Streaming profits improve.
- Read-across: Consumer spending.
- Uber (UBER) — Wednesday:
- What matters: Mobility demand and margins.
- The tell headline: Growth without margin pressure.
- Read-across: Consumer services.
UK / Europe
- HSBC (HSBA) — Tuesday:
- What matters: Asia exposure, costs, credit risk.
- The tell headline: Resilience despite geopolitical uncertainty.
- Read-across: UK banks and Asia-linked financials.
- Diageo (DGE) — Wednesday:
- What matters: US spirits demand and margins.
- The tell headline: Volumes stabilise.
- Read-across: Global consumer staples.
- Next (NXT) — Wednesday:
- What matters: Full-price sales and wage-cost guidance.
- The tell headline: Consumer holds up.
- Read-across: UK retail.
- Shell (SHEL) — Thursday:
- What matters: Trading profits, buybacks, cash flow.
- The tell headline: Oil price boost offsets volatility.
- Read-across: FTSE 100 energy and dividends.
- Novo Nordisk (NOVO) — Wednesday:
- What matters: Obesity-drug growth and competition.
- The tell headline: Demand still outruns capacity.
- Read-across: European healthcare.
6) 💷 Fixed Income & Currency Outlook
A) UK Gilts / Rates
- Facts: UK 2y gilt: 4.43%; 10y gilt: 4.97%. The 2y rose roughly 7bp last week, while the 10y remains near multi-year highs.
- View: Neutral duration — yields are attractive, but oil keeps inflation risk live.
- Watchlist: UK services PMI, oil, BoE rhetoric.
- Portfolio angle: Prefer a balanced gilt ladder over a big long-duration bet.
B) FX — GBP Focus
- Facts: GBP/USD 1.3606; GBP/EUR 1.1582. Sterling is near a 10-week high versus the dollar.
- View: Range-bound GBP — stronger rates support sterling, but UK growth risk caps upside.
- Watchlist: Fed pricing, Brent, UK PMIs.
- Portfolio angle: A stronger pound can reduce GBP returns from unhedged US/global equity funds.
7) 🧠 Sentiment Check
Market gauges:
- VIX: Around 16.7–17.0, near a two-month low calm, not panic.
- Rates: US yields rose last week, showing inflation concern has not disappeared.
- Credit spreads: Tightening, suggesting credit investors are not yet pricing major stress.
- CNN Fear & Greed Index: 66.6, in “greed” territory.
Positioning / flows:
- AAII sentiment: Bulls 38.1%, bears 39.7%; bull-bear spread -1.6%. Retail investors are not euphoric despite record highs.
Implication:
- Sentiment supports further upside if payrolls are benign.
- But with VIX low and valuations high, a hot jobs number could hit equities quickly.
8) 📈 Valuations & Expectations
Valuation snapshot:
- S&P 500 fwd P/E: 20.9x, above both the 5-year average of 19.9x and 10-year average of 18.9x.
- Implication: The US is priced for strong earnings delivery; the UK remains cheaper but more value/cyclical-heavy.
Earnings expectations:
- Next-year EPS growth: US c.21%
- Revisions trend: US improving sharply during earnings season.
- Beat-rate context: Q1 US earnings expectations have risen materially after mega-cap results.
9) 🗳️ Geopolitics & Wildcards
- Event: US-Iran / Strait of Hormuz uncertainty.
- Impact channel: Oil, shipping, inflation.
- What to watch: Any reopening deal or renewed strikes.
- Most sensitive assets: Brent, airlines, gilts, inflation-linked bonds. (Reuters)
- Event: Oil above $100 for longer.
- Impact channel: Inflation expectations and central-bank policy.
- What to watch: Brent moving back toward $120.
- Most sensitive assets: Gilts, consumer stocks, energy equities.
- Event: US payrolls surprise.
- Impact channel: Fed pricing, dollar, yields.
- What to watch: Jobs, wages and unemployment together.
- Most sensitive assets: US tech, Nasdaq, GBP/USD, Treasuries.
10) ⚡ The Bottom Line
- If US payrolls are soft but not recessionary → then equities can extend the rally → watch S&P 500 breadth.
- If wage growth or oil surprises higher → then yields rise and valuation pressure returns → watch US 10y near 4.4%.
- If sterling keeps strengthening → then UK investors may see weaker GBP returns from unhedged global funds → watch GBP/USD around 1.36.
© Clearly Investments Ltd. Educational information only. This is not investment advice.
