1) 📊 Last Week in Review
Week ending 15 May 2026
Performance snapshot — close Friday 15 May
- FTSE 100: 10,195.37 | -0.4% weekly | YTD +2.7%
- S&P 500: 7,408.50 | +0.1% weekly | YTD +8.02%
- MSCI World: 4,741.61 | -0.3% weekly | YTD +7.0%
- UK 10y gilt yield: 5.18% (+25 bp) | US 10y: 4.59% (+24 bp)
- GBP/USD: 1.3326 (-2.2%) | Brent: $109.26 (+7.8%)
What moved markets
- Oil shock: Brent jumped above $109 as Iran/Hormuz disruption risk kept inflation fears alive.
- Bond sell-off: UK gilts were hit hard, with 10-year yields reaching their highest level since 2008.
- AI strength vs yield pressure: US equities held up thanks to AI earnings optimism, but Friday’s yield spike exposed valuation risk.
Sector & style
- Best sector: US Energy +6.0%.
- Worst area: European banks/materials were weak; STOXX materials fell 5.1%, banks around 6%.
- Large vs Small: Large caps won by roughly 2.5 percentage points; S&P 500 +0.1%, Russell 2000 -2.4%.
So what?
- This week is about whether markets can keep believing in AI-led earnings growth while bond yields and oil prices keep tightening financial conditions.
- For UK investors, the key risk is a double hit: higher global yields plus a weaker pound lifting imported inflation.
2) 🌟 The Defining Narrative
Can strong earnings still beat the bond market?
Why it matters
- If yields keep rising, future company profits are worth less today. That particularly matters for expensive growth stocks.
- If oil stays high, inflation expectations rise, central banks sound tougher, and bonds may remain volatile.
What confirms it / what breaks it
- Confirms: Nvidia delivers strong AI demand guidance and UK CPI cools meaningfully.
- Breaks: UK inflation disappoints, Fed minutes sound hawkish, or Brent pushes higher again.
UK investor angle
- A weaker pound boosts unhedged US/global equity returns in sterling terms, but also signals imported inflation pressure.
- UK gilts now offer higher yields, but long-dated bonds remain vulnerable to political and inflation shocks.
3) 🏦 Central Bank Watch
Bank of England
- What’s scheduled: Sarah Breeden speech, Tuesday 19 May, 09:10.
- Market pricing: Reuters polling shows the BoE expected to hold at 3.75%, but markets have moved toward pricing possible hikes.
- Key thing to listen for: Whether officials treat the oil shock as temporary or inflationary.
- UK implications: Direct read-through to gilts, mortgage expectations, GBP, and UK equity valuations.
Federal Reserve
- What’s scheduled: FOMC minutes, Wednesday 20 May, 19:00.
- Market pricing: Rate-cut hopes have faded; Reuters reported December hike odds rose to roughly 49.5%.
- Key thing to listen for: Any concern that energy prices and tariffs are re-anchoring inflation higher.
- UK implications: Higher US yields usually support the dollar and pressure global growth stocks.
ECB
- What’s scheduled: Lagarde/Cipollone at G7 meetings and Eurogroup/ECOFIN through the week.
- Market pricing: June policy debate has shifted more hawkish as eurozone inflation pressure rises.
- Key thing to listen for: Whether the ECB talks about inflation credibility or growth weakness.
- UK implications: EUR/GBP and European equity exposure may be sensitive to rate-hike language.
BoJ
- What’s scheduled: No policy decision; Japan GDP, PMI and CPI data are the catalysts.
- Market pricing: Next BoJ meeting is 14–15 June; hawkish comments have raised hike expectations.
- Key thing to listen for: Whether inflation and wage pressure justify a June move.
- UK implications: Higher Japanese yields can pressure global bond markets if Japanese investors repatriate capital. (
4) 🌍 Macro Calendar
| Date | Region and Event | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Mon 18 May | China — Industrial production / retail sales | Tests whether China’s economy is recovering and whether global demand is improving. |
| Tue 19 May | Japan — Q1 GDP | Important for the Bank of Japan and the yen, especially if growth is stronger than expected. |
| Tue 19 May | UK — Labour market data | Wage growth and unemployment are key inputs for the Bank of England’s inflation view. |
| Tue 19 May | US — Pending home sales | Shows how higher interest rates are affecting the housing market. |
| Wed 20 May | UK — CPI / PPI inflation | The biggest UK data point of the week. A hot number could push gilt yields and sterling higher. |
| Wed 20 May | US — FOMC minutes | Investors will look for clues on whether the Fed is more worried about inflation or growth. |
| Thu 21 May | Eurozone — Flash PMIs | Gives an early read on whether Europe is slowing or stabilising. |
| Thu 21 May | UK — Flash PMIs | Helps investors judge whether the UK economy is still growing despite high rates. |
| Thu 21 May | US — Jobless claims / housing starts / Philly Fed | A useful snapshot of the labour market, housing and manufacturing sentiment. |
| Thu 21 May | US — Flash PMIs | A timely read on US business activity and inflation pressure. |
| Fri 22 May | Japan — CPI inflation | A key input for possible Bank of Japan policy tightening. |
| Fri 22 May | UK — Retail sales | Shows whether UK consumers are still spending or starting to pull back. |
| Fri 22 May | US — Michigan consumer sentiment | Inflation expectations matter because they influence Fed policy and bond yields. |
Calendar based on ONS release dates, Fed/FOMC schedule, S&P Global PMI release information, and market calendars.
5) 📊 Earnings Watch
US
Nvidia (NVDA) — Wednesday
- What matters: AI data-centre demand and forward guidance.
- The “tell” headline: “Blackwell/Rubin demand still accelerating.”
- Read-across: AI capex, semiconductors, Nasdaq leadership.
Home Depot (HD) — Tuesday
- What matters: Big-ticket home improvement demand.
- The “tell” headline: “Higher rates are delaying housing projects.”
- Read-across: US consumer, housing, cyclicals.
Target (TGT) — Wednesday
- What matters: Discretionary spending.
- The “tell” headline: “Middle-income consumer pressure is rising.”
- Read-across: US retail margins.
Walmart (WMT) — Thursday
- What matters: Grocery, e-commerce and pricing power.
- The “tell” headline: “Consumers still trading down.”
- Read-across: Defensive retail and inflation behaviour.
Deere (DE) — Thursday
- What matters: Farm equipment demand.
- The “tell” headline: “Capex slowdown hits orders.”
- Read-across: Industrials and global agriculture. (Barron’s)
UK / Europe
Marks & Spencer (MKS) — Wednesday
- What matters: Food momentum and clothing margins.
- The “tell” headline: “Consumer squeeze is not yet derailing sales.”
- Read-across: UK retail.
Severn Trent (SVT) — Wednesday
- What matters: Regulation, capex and debt costs.
- The “tell” headline: “Higher yields pressure utilities.”
- Read-across: UK defensives.
BT (BT.A) — Thursday
- What matters: Fibre capex, cash flow and dividend cover.
- The “tell” headline: “Cost savings offset investment pressure.”
- Read-across: UK telecoms and income stocks.
Intertek (ITRK) — Thursday
- What matters: Testing demand and margins.
- The “tell” headline: “Quality assurance spending remains resilient.”
- Read-across: Global industrial services. (IG)
6) 💷 Fixed Income & Currency Outlook
A) UK Gilts / Rates
- Facts: UK 2y yield 4.56%, up roughly 18 bp on the week; 10y yield 5.18%, up around 25 bp.
- View: Neutral — yields are more attractive, but volatility remains high.
- Watchlist: UK CPI, labour data, gilt supply, political headlines.
- Portfolio angle: Short-to-intermediate gilts look cleaner than long duration until inflation risk settles.
B) FX — GBP focus
- Facts: GBP/USD 1.3326, down about 2.2%; GBP/EUR 1.1466, down about 0.9%.
- View: Neutral-to-underweight GBP tactically — UK inflation and politics are the swing factors.
- Watchlist: UK CPI, oil, US yields, political stability.
- Portfolio angle: Sterling weakness helps unhedged US/global equity returns, but raises imported inflation risk.
7) 🧠 Sentiment Check
- Current mood: Risk-on, but fragile.
Market gauges
- VIX / MOVE: VIX rose toward 19, still below panic levels but showing stress; MOVE around 80, near normal but rising.
- Rates: US and UK yields rose sharply; this is the main pressure point.
- Credit spreads: Still tight, suggesting no broad credit panic.
- CNN Fear & Greed Index: Exact level not publicly available from the blocked source; reputable secondary reports place it in Greed territory.
Positioning / flows
- Global equity funds saw an eighth weekly inflow; technology drew record inflows.
- US large-cap funds attracted money, while mid- and small-cap funds saw outflows.
- Bond funds also attracted inflows, mainly shorter-duration and investment-grade areas.
Implication
- Sentiment is not bearish enough to offer a clean contrarian buying signal.
- This week’s asymmetry is simple: good Nvidia + soft CPI can extend the rally; hot CPI + hawkish Fed minutes can quickly hit valuations.
8) 📈 Valuations & Expectations
Valuation snapshot
- S&P 500 forward P/E: 21.4x, above both the 5-year average of 19.9x and 10-year average of 18.9x.
- FTSE 100 forward P/E: direct current figure not available; UK FTSE All-Share proxy is 12.5x, below its 13.7x average.
- Implication: The US is priced for strong earnings delivery; the UK remains cheaper but carries weaker growth and political risk.
Earnings expectations
- Consensus earnings growth: US CY2026 earnings growth projected at 21.5%; UK profit growth proxy points to high-single-digit growth into 2027.
- Revisions trend: US revisions have improved with AI earnings; UK revisions remain more mixed.
- Beat-rate context: Around 83% of reported S&P 500 companies have beaten Q1 profit expectations.
So what?
- For the US, earnings must keep beating because valuations leave less room for disappointment.
- For the UK, the valuation cushion is real, but inflation and gilt volatility must calm down.
9) 🗳️ Geopolitics & Wildcards
Middle East / Strait of Hormuz
- Impact channel: Oil, LNG, shipping, inflation.
- What to watch: Any escalation that restricts tanker flows.
- Most sensitive assets: Brent, airlines, chemicals, gilts, inflation-linked bonds.
UK political instability
- Impact channel: Fiscal credibility, gilt risk premium, GBP.
- What to watch: Labour leadership challenge headlines or looser fiscal rhetoric.
- Most sensitive assets: Gilts, sterling, UK banks, utilities.
US-China trade / oil diplomacy
- Impact channel: Tariffs, energy purchases, supply chains.
- What to watch: Any signs of sanctions relief or oil-purchase commitments.
- Most sensitive assets: Semiconductors, oil, EM equities.
Japan bond market
- Impact channel: Global duration, US Treasury demand, yen.
- What to watch: Further rise in JGB yields or BoJ hike signals.
- Most sensitive assets: US Treasuries, JPY, global bonds.
10) ⚡ The Bottom Line
- If UK CPI undershoots → then gilt yields may ease and GBP stabilise → watch UK 10y gilt around 5.0%.
- If Nvidia beats and guides strongly → then AI leadership can reassert itself → watch Nasdaq breadth, not just the headline index.
- If Fed minutes sound hawkish while oil stays above $100 → then global equities may struggle → watch US 10y above 4.6%.
© Clearly Investments Ltd. Educational information only. This is not investment advice.
