Daily Market Analysis —Morning Session | April 28, 2026 | Capital Street FX
Iran Tables Hormuz Proposal · Brent $107 · WTI $99
FOMC Meeting Opens · Mag 7 Reports Tomorrow AH — Gold $4,702 · Bitcoin $77,700
Iran submits Hormuz reopening proposal via Pakistani mediators — Trump and national security team reviewing · Brent near $107 intraday, WTI approaches $99.00 · FOMC two-day meeting begins today, rate decision Wednesday 19:00 GMT · Mag 7 megaprint tomorrow AH: GOOGL, META, MSFT, AMZN all reporting · Gold firms to $4,702 on safe-haven demand · Bitcoin pulls back to $77,700 on risk-off positioning · 12 actionable trade signals across forex, commodities, crypto and indices
Tuesday Overview — Key Themes & Variables in Focus
Key Events Today & This Week
Market Snapshot — Tuesday April 28, 2026 · 07:00 GMT
| Asset | Price | Change | Key Level | Note | Bias |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| WTI Crude | $98.97 | ▲+1.13% | R: $100 | S: $94 | Iran deal review limits upside; Hormuz supply shock ongoing | BULL |
| Brent Crude | $106.05 | ▲+1.20% | R: $112 | S: $106 | Hit $108.20 intraday — 6th consecutive up session. Goldman Q4 target: $90 | BULL |
| Gold (XAU/USD) | $4,702 | ▲+0.76% | R: $4,800 | S: $4,650 | Geopolitical + inflation support; FOMC cap keeps rally contained | BULL |
| Silver (XAG/USD) | $77.10 | ▲+0.98% | R: $80 | S: $74 | Parabolic move; industrial + safe-haven dual demand | BULL |
| EUR/USD | 1.1710 | ▼−0.20% | S: 1.1667 | R: 1.1745 | Range-bound 1.1667–1.1745; USD bids on FOMC eve; ECB Thursday risk | BEAR |
| GBP/USD | 1.3305 | ▼−0.10% | S: 1.3270 | R: 1.3400 | Resistance at 1.3596 remains intact; watching FOMC for USD catalyst | WATCH |
| USD/JPY | 143.40 | ▲+0.38% | R: 145 | S: 141.50 | BoJ meets Tuesday; no change expected; carry trade bids USD/JPY | BULL |
| Bitcoin (BTC/USD) | $77,699 | ▼−2.65% | S: $74,000 | R: $80,000 | Pre-FOMC risk-off pullback; $80K breakout conditional on Mag 7 beats | WATCH |
| S&P 500 (Fut) | 7,211 | ▲+0.08% | R: 7,300 | S: 7,100 | ATH 7,173.91 Monday close; earnings-driven; 84% beat rate so far | BULL |
| Nasdaq 100 (Fut) | 27,434 | ▼−0.02% | R: 27,900 | S: 26,800 | SOX up 33% in 3 months; overbought RSI above 85; Mag 7 earnings binary | WATCH |
| VIX | 18.02 | ▼−3.7% | Key: 20 | Low: 15 | Below 20 = risk appetite intact; binary FOMC + earnings could spike above 25 | WATCH |
| 10Y UST Yield | 4.52% | ▲+2bps | R: 4.65 | S: 4.35 | Elevated on 3.3% CPI; FOMC hawkish rhetoric = higher yields = USD bull | WATCH |
12 Market Observations — Tuesday, April 28, 2026
WTI continues its continued move toward the $100 psychological barrier, now in its sixth consecutive positive session. Iran’s Hormuz proposal is a double-edged sword: positive diplomatic progress would trigger a swift $10–$15 correction, but the proposal requires the US to lift its naval blockade — a condition Washington has not agreed to. The IEA has described the Hormuz shutdown as the largest energy supply shock on record. Even if a deal is struck, Lipow Oil Associates notes it would take months for flows to normalize. The structural long remains intact. Commodity trading at Capital Street FX gives access to WTI and Brent CFDs with institutional-grade spreads.
Brent is now in its sixth consecutive positive session, trading at a persistent $12 premium to WTI — signalling global supply tightness extending well beyond US crude markets. The Iran-via-Pakistan proposal adds diplomatic optionality but no certainty: Iran demands the US naval blockade be lifted as a precondition, and Trump has yet to signal willingness. ING commodities head Warren Patterson notes the market is tightening every day that the strait stays closed. Brent CFD trading at Capital Street FX offers exposure to global oil pricing.
Gold is performing its classic dual role — safe-haven from geopolitical risk AND inflation hedge against oil-driven CPI at 3.3% YoY. The metal is consolidating just below Monday’s ATH of $4,742, with ceasefire uncertainty and a data-driven Fed providing persistent floors. Goldman Sachs has a year-end target of $4,900/oz; Bank of America targets $5,000. JP Morgan’s 2026 average forecast sits at $4,753/oz — almost exactly where gold is trading today. The JM Bullion spot reference shows gold “giving back a bit of recent ground as easing ceasefire tensions temporarily reduce safe-haven urgency.” This is a buying opportunity, not a reversal. Gold trading at Capital Street FX provides access to XAU/USD with tight spreads.
EUR/USD is trading within a defined 1.1667–1.1745 range, with the pair rebounding off confluent support last week at the 200-day MA zone. The structural bear thesis remains intact on two fronts: first, the ECB’s oil-stagflation dilemma — Brent at $109 drives Eurozone inflation while simultaneously crushing growth, leaving the ECB in a policy paralysis trap; second, a hawkish FOMC statement Wednesday would widen USD rate advantage, and the EUR faces additional downside risk from the ECB decision Thursday where a dovish surprise is plausible. Europe imports ~85% of its crude oil. Forex trading at Capital Street FX covers EUR/USD with institutional execution.
Bitcoin is undergoing a healthy pre-event pullback from Sunday’s $79,057 high, down 2.65% to $77,699. This is classic pre-FOMC risk-off positioning — not a structural reversal. The AI infrastructure bull cycle, institutional ETF inflows, and Iran war safe-haven hedging all remain intact tailwinds. For existing longs from the $79K level, stop at $74K remains appropriate. For new entries, waiting for the FOMC-driven dip to $74,000–$75,500 offers a much cleaner risk/reward ahead of the expected $80K breakout catalyst from Mag 7 beats tomorrow. Crypto trading at Capital Street FX provides BTC access with deep liquidity.
The S&P 500 has now closed at all-time highs four weeks straight, driven by an exceptional earnings season: 84% of reporting companies have beaten EPS expectations — historically strong — and annual earnings growth is now tracking at 15.1%, up from 13.1% a week ago. The AI monetisation thesis is being confirmed quarter by quarter. The 28% of S&P 500 companies that have reported shows the foundation is strong. Schwab’s Nathan Peterson notes the chip rally is “historic and speaks to the strength of the AI buildout theme.” Index trading at Capital Street FX provides S&P 500 CFD access.
The Nasdaq 100 and the PHLX Semiconductor Index (SOX) are in extraordinary territory. SOX is up 33% in three months, almost 50% from its March lows, with 18 straight sessions of gains — the RSI has climbed above 85, well into overbought territory. Schwab’s Schwab Center analysis notes this setup “could make chips more vulnerable if there’s bad news.” The entire Mag 7 cloud cohort reports tomorrow. Key consensus metrics: Azure ~38% growth, Google Cloud ~49%, AWS ~25.6%. Any deceleration in cloud growth rates OR softer-than-expected 2026 AI capex guidance would trigger a sharp chip sector unwind. Nasdaq futures at Capital Street FX offer access to US tech index exposure.
USD/JPY is advancing on two macro supports: (1) the Bank of Japan meeting today is expected to hold rates, maintaining the carry differential advantage for USD; (2) pre-FOMC USD bids are firming across majors. Schwab notes the rate differential remains the “major driver in this pair.” Oil-driven US inflation reinforces the Fed’s hold stance, which sustains higher USD rates vs. near-zero Japanese yields. Nomura warns carry unwind risk if US macro weakens — a tail risk to monitor Wednesday after FOMC. Forex trading at Capital Street FX provides tight USD/JPY spreads.
Silver is in a remarkable parabolic advance, benefiting from both the industrial AI demand story (silver is used in solar panels, semiconductors and electronics) and the safe-haven surge from Middle East tensions that is lifting gold. Forex.com’s Michael Boutros noted silver’s “move remains parabolic at this point” — a rare case of both demand drivers firing simultaneously. The gold/silver ratio around 61x suggests silver still has relative room to run versus gold before mean reversion. Silver CFD trading at Capital Street FX provides exposure to XAG/USD.
GBP/USD has rebounded off support near 1.3270 but faces significant resistance overhead at 1.3400 and the major technical zone at 1.3596/99 (May & August highs). The IMF’s April 2026 WEO cited the Iran war as a meaningful UK growth headwind — the UK faces its own oil price shock with slower monetary easing ahead. A hawkish FOMC Wednesday combined with rising USD would provide the directional catalyst for this short. Forex.com’s Michael Boutros notes the pair needs a close above 1.3596 to “mark uptrend resumption” — a high bar given current macro headwinds. GBP/USD forex trading at Capital Street FX.
Ethereum is tracking Bitcoin’s pre-FOMC pullback. The setup mirrors BTC: the structural AI infrastructure bull cycle, institutional staking inflows, and the ongoing Clarity Act pro-crypto legislation in the US Senate all provide fundamental support. Tom Lee’s $20,000 ETH forecast for 2026 reflects the broader AI tokenisation wave thesis. Wait for the FOMC + Mag 7 event resolution before establishing a fresh position — the clearest entry is on a post-FOMC dip to the $1,900–$1,950 zone. Ethereum trading at Capital Street FX.
Alphabet is the strongest performer in the Mag 7 cohort year-to-date, having roughly doubled over the past year. Google Cloud growth has been accelerating quarter by quarter — from +34% in Q3 2025 to +48% in Q4 2025, with Q1 2026 consensus expecting a further acceleration to ~+49.6% YoY. The company recently disclosed that 75% of all Google programming is now AI-generated, validated by engineers — a stunning productivity signal. Revenue consensus of $92.2B represents +20.5% YoY growth. The Search advertising arm is expected to deliver +17–18% growth. $175–$185B in planned 2026 capex confirms the AI infrastructure supercycle is accelerating. Stock CFD trading at Capital Street FX.
Commonly Raised Questions — April 28, 2026
Iran’s proposal, conveyed via Pakistani mediators, asks the US to lift its naval blockade of Iranian ports in exchange for reopening commercial tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, while deferring nuclear negotiations to a later phase. The proposal does NOT mean a deal is imminent — it simply means there is now a diplomatic framework on the table.
Andy Lipow of Lipow Oil Associates told CNBC that even if hostilities ended immediately, “a return to normal market conditions would take months.” The strait blockade has now lasted nine weeks. Supply chain disruptions, tanker re-routing insurance premiums, port damage, and inventory depletion mean the oil market remains structurally tighter than pre-war levels for at least 2–3 months after any deal. Goldman Sachs raised its Q4 2026 Brent target to $90 — still far below current $109 prices — reflecting the market’s view that normalisation is slow and gradual. WTI’s path to $100 remains open so long as a deal is not officially confirmed.
Jerome Powell’s term as Federal Reserve Chair ends May 15, 2026, making this week’s April 28–29 meeting his final one as Chair. President Trump has nominated Kevin Warsh — described by Kiplinger as “Ben Bernanke’s right-hand man during the 2008–09 financial crisis” — as Powell’s successor. Warsh is widely viewed as more hawkish than Powell on inflation and more aligned with market discipline.
Markets are watching closely for two things: first, whether Powell delivers a hawkish final statement acknowledging oil-driven inflation risks (which would push yields higher and strengthen USD); and second, whether Powell confirms he will remain on the Fed Board of Governors after his Chair term ends, as is not customary. His post-meeting press conference at 19:30 GMT Wednesday carries unusually high interpretive significance — both for the rate path and for the Fed’s political independence going forward. Economic calendar at Capital Street FX tracks all central bank decisions.
1. Size all positions at 50–60% of normal today. Event density is at an annual maximum Wednesday — concurrent FOMC decision, Powell’s final press conference, and four Mag 7 earnings prints create bidirectional gap risk across all asset classes simultaneously.
2. Do NOT hold large individual Mag 7 stocks through Wednesday AH earnings. Options are pricing 7–16% implied moves on individual names. Use Nasdaq futures (Signal 07) to get tech sector exposure with distributed risk rather than concentrated single-name positions.
3. Trail stops on oil longs — WTI to $93.50 (Signal 01), Brent to $105.50 (Signal 02). These protect gains if a deal headline breaks Wednesday.
4. Take partial profits before Wednesday 18:30 GMT — before the simultaneous FOMC + earnings window creates maximum intraday volatility.
5. Gold (Signal 03) and Silver (Signal 09) are positions showing relative resilience this week — they benefit regardless of the FOMC outcome direction (hawkish = inflation hedge, dovish = rate cut driven rally).
CFD trading involves significant risk. Capital Street FX’s VIP account provides access to advanced order management tools. Please consult a licensed financial advisor before trading.
The single most important metric across all four companies is AI capex guidance for full-year 2026. The four companies have collectively guided to roughly $300 billion in 2026 capex, mostly AI infrastructure. Any softening of that guidance — even subtle language like “we are monitoring returns carefully” — would cascade into a Nvidia selloff and a broad chip sector unwind, reversing the 33% SOX gain of the past three months.
By company: Microsoft — Azure cloud growth rate (Street consensus near 38%). Any deceleration below 35% is bearish. Alphabet — Google Cloud growth (Street consensus ~49% YoY). Search advertising growth expected at +17–18%. Amazon — AWS growth (Street consensus ~25.6%, $36.8B). Operating income margin expansion is the secondary signal. Meta — Ad revenue growth and whether $115–135B in 2026 capex guidance is maintained or raised. Market breadth has narrowed (only 53% of S&P 500 above 50-day MA), meaning a Mag 7 beat-and-raise is needed to extend the ATH rally rather than just maintain it. Daily market analysis from Capital Street FX Research Desk covers post-earnings responses in real time.
Market Analysis Summary — Tuesday, April 28, 2026
Tuesday opens the second day of the an unusually event-dense week with a market now navigating three simultaneous binaries: Iran’s conditional Hormuz reopening proposal being reviewed by Trump’s national security team; the FOMC two-day meeting commencing today with a rate decision and Jerome Powell’s final press conference as Chair on Wednesday at 19:00 GMT; and the Mag 7 megaprint — GOOGL, META, MSFT, and AMZN all reporting after-close Wednesday with combined AI capex guidance representing the market’s entire AI infrastructure supercycle thesis.
Positions that may offer relatively clear setups this week include: Signal 01 (WTI long toward $100) and Signal 02 (Brent long toward $112) — both benefit whether the Iran deal collapses (oil higher) or stalls (oil supported), and only suffer on a confirmed deal; Signal 03 (Gold long toward $4,800) — benefits from both hawkish FOMC (inflation hedge) and dovish FOMC (rate-cut driven rally), offering exposure to both scenarios this week; Signal 04 (EUR/USD short) — the oil-stagflation catch-22 for the ECB structurally weakens the euro regardless of FOMC direction. For forex trading, commodity trading, and crypto trading across all 12 signals, Capital Street FX offers the 900% deposit bonus and 1:10,000 leverage that for those seeking access to these markets during this elevated-event week.
Risk considerations for the week: Size all positions at 50–60% of normal. Do NOT hold large individual Mag 7 names through Wednesday AH earnings — use index futures to distribute risk. Take partial profits before FOMC Wednesday at 18:30 GMT. Trail stops on all oil longs. The three-way FOMC + Iran deal + Mag 7 earnings binary structure creates simultaneous gap risk in every direction — preserving capital for post-event reloading is more important this week than maximising pre-event exposure. CFD trading involves significant risk of loss. This report is published for informational purposes and does not constitute personal financial advice.