No April showers. Equities ended the month on a strong note, with the S&P 500 pushing to a fresh record high as strong earnings from economically sensitive leaders like Caterpillar and AI heavyweight Alphabet outweighed softer GDP data and ongoing geopolitical uncertainty. The rally reflects continued investor confidence that corporate America can sustain growth despite elevated valuations, slower economic expansion, and heavy AI-related spending. While concerns remain around whether massive capital expenditures by firms like Meta and Microsoft will ultimately justify current valuations, markets are currently rewarding the tech giants.
The euro is showing some signs of stabilizing against the U.S. dollar after earlier weakness driven by the Iran war, with technical indicators suggesting buyers are defending key support levels. Holding above its widely watched 200-day moving average implies that investors may see the recent pullback as temporary, improving the odds of further gains if confidence continues to build. From a market sentiment perspective, this reflects a more balanced outlook for the euro, where geopolitical pressures remain important but may be partially offset by technical resilience and investor positioning. While risks remain, the euro’s ability to maintain critical support suggests that bearish momentum may be easing unless broader macro or geopolitical conditions deteriorate again.
More FX effects. Japan has officially intervened in currency markets for the first time in nearly two years to support the yen, signaling that policymakers are no longer willing to tolerate sustained weakness beyond key psychological thresholds. The move strengthened the yen and caught heavily bearish market positioning off guard, reinforcing that Japanese authorities view extreme depreciation as a growing economic and inflation risk. While intervention alone may provide only temporary relief, it suggests that officials are prepared to defend the currency more aggressively, especially if paired with future tightening from the Bank of Japan. The move (estimated to have cost roughly $34.5 billion) temporarily strengthened the yen, but markets remain skeptical that intervention alone can create lasting stability without broader monetary policy shifts from the Bank of Japan or the Fed. Persistent U.S.–Japan interest rate differentials, elevated geopolitical risks, and higher energy prices continue to pressure Japan’s currency, meaning further intervention may be necessary.
Stuck between and rock and a hard place. Kevin Warsh may face an unusually difficult start at the Fed, as he balances White House pressure for rate cuts against a policymaking committee that remains skeptical of easing amid persistent inflation and resilient economic data. If Warsh pushes too aggressively for cuts, he could be forced into the rare and risky position of dissenting against his own committee, a move that could undermine both his credibility with markets and his relationships within the Fed. While he has previously argued that AI-driven productivity and balance sheet reduction could create room for lower rates, current inflation and oil-price pressures may make a pivot difficult in the near term.
Gold is reasserting itself as a major global reserve asset as central banks (particularly in emerging markets) continue diversifying away from U.S. dollar holdings amid rising geopolitical instability, deglobalization, and concerns over long-term fiscal sustainability. The share of gold in global reserves has climbed in recent years, reversing much of the dollar-dominance period that emerged after the 1990s, when stable geopolitics and strong U.S. fiscal credibility made Treasuries especially attractive. Today’s more fragmented global order is renewing gold’s strategic appeal as a neutral store of value, suggesting that central bank demand may remain a powerful long-term structural support for prices even after recent volatility.
No, not the beer. Trump has approved a major new cross-border oil pipeline project, dubbed “Keystone Light”, that would significantly expand Canadian crude exports into the U.S. The move signals a renewed push for North American energy infrastructure and fossil fuel integration. The Bridger Pipeline Expansion could transport up to 550,000 bpd, strengthening Canadian oil sands access to U.S. refiners and export markets while reinforcing broader energy security goals. However, the project remains highly controversial, with environmental groups raising concerns over spill risks, climate implications, and the operator’s prior safety record. While the approval marks a major policy shift back toward large-scale pipeline development, the project is sure to face (at least a few) regulatory hurdles.
Canada’s major railways are feeling the strain from trade uncertainty, tariff pressures, and geopolitical disruption, with weaker-than-expected earnings highlighting softer industrial and cross-border freight demand. Canadian National Railway and Canadian Pacific Kansas City both reported revenue disappointments, reflecting broader challenges facing Canadian resource, manufacturing, and transportation sectors as USMCA negotiations and trade flows remain up in the air. While grain and agricultural shipments have provided some support, weakness across metals, automotive, and industrial freight suggests broader economic caution. The sector’s struggles serve as another indicator that Canada’s export-oriented economy remains vulnerable to prolonged trade friction and global instability, even as domestic growth shows some signs of resilience.
The struggles of beauty. A farmer in the U.K. is considering breeding less photogenic cattle to reduce the growing problem of tourists and influencers harassing his Highland cows for social media content. Frustrated by constant trespassing, selfies, feeding, and unsafe interactions with his herd, the farmer seems to have reached his limit, saying the popularity of the animals’ distinctive shaggy appearance has turned them into viral attractions, creating both stress for the animals and legal liability for him. His proposed solution is to crossbreed the Highland cattle with less visually distinctive breeds, making them less appealing for online attention over time. You must be thinking, “how photogenic are these cows?”. The answer is very.
Diversion: No spotter needed