Six of Eight Asset Classes Confirm Risk-On — Crude Is the Outlier That Matters

Global Grid: Weekend Edition

Tactical Radar | Published for the week ahead | Friday 17 April 2026

Six of eight major assets closed the week in risk-on territory. That is the headline. The two exceptions — crude oil and the dollar — are not minor footnotes. They are the fault lines that determine whether the consensus holds or fractures on Monday.

The grid below maps ten assets across price, weekly change, directional signal, and regime classification. As you’ll find in our Positioning Pressure brief, the flow context adds depth. As you’ll find in our Hot Zones brief, the sector translation follows directly.

Gold daily chart — cross-asset alignment context

Cross-Asset Grid — Friday 17 April Close

Asset Price Weekly Chg Signal Regime Commentary
S&P 500 (SPY) 710.14 +1.20% Bullish Markup 2pts from 52-week high. Institutional accumulation broad. Institutions are buying, not hedging
Nasdaq 100 (NAS100) 24,468 +1.50% Bullish Momentum overbought Trailing Russell but still advancing. Selective speculative conviction. Overbought flag
Gold (XAUUSD) 4,849 +1.48% Bullish Trend continuation Record levels. Positioning crowded but trending. Silver outperforming at +3.98% confirms strength
Silver (XAGUSD) 80.93 +3.98% Bullish Momentum acceleration Leading gold by 3:1 ratio. Industrial + safe-haven dual bid. Strongest weekly move
Crude Oil (CL) 84.00 -9.41% Bearish Demand destruction The one asset breaking consensus. Speculative shorts stretched. Snap-back risk is the tail event
Bitcoin (BTC) 77,031 +3.27% Bullish Recovery Participating in risk appetite but lagging equities. Modest institutional interest
Dollar Index (DXY) 98.07 -0.13% Bearish Structural decline Dollar weakness is the tailwind for everything risk-on
EUR/USD 1.176 -0.16% Mixed Consolidation Contradicts DXY softness. EUR giving back recent gains despite positive positioning. Watch for re-engagement
Credit (LQD) Mild bullish Duration demand Institutional credit flow confirms expectations for stable to lower rates
Volatility (VIX) 17.50 Falling Bullish for equities Contango 52nd percentile. Volatility sellers in control. Hedging is cheap

Multi-Asset Alignment

Alignment Score
Around 75%
Risk-On Assets
7 of 10
Key Outlier
Crude Oil

Seven of the ten assets above are signalling risk-on or supporting risk-on conditions. The exceptions are crude oil (bearish outlier), EUR/USD (mixed and contradicting the dollar), and credit (supportive but indirect). When alignment is this high, the macro environment favours directional trades with the trend rather than counter-trend or mean reversion strategies.

As you’ll find in our Macro Pulse brief, the broader cross-asset reading scored similarly bullish. This grid adds granularity with silver and Bitcoin included, raising the alignment because silver’s momentum and Bitcoin’s participation tip the balance further toward risk-on.


Global Index Grid

Index Region Alignment Read Key Driver
FTSE 100 UK Aligned Gold and metals strength supports commodity-heavy FTSE. Sterling strength is a headwind for exporters
DAX 40 Germany Mixed Export-driven index sensitive to EUR/USD consolidation. Industrial strength is a tailwind
Euro Stoxx 50 Eurozone Mixed EUR consolidation creates uncertainty for the broad eurozone benchmark
CAC 40 France Aligned Luxury sector benefits from risk-on global appetite. Industrial component rides cyclical rotation
Nikkei 225 Japan Conditional Dollar weakness may strengthen yen, creating a headwind. Tech and semi exposure is supportive
Hang Seng Hong Kong Aligned Dollar weakness supportive. Tech-heavy composition benefits from global risk-on flow
ASX 200 Australia Aligned Mining exposure directly benefits from gold, silver, and copper strength
Nifty 50 India Aligned Domestic growth story insulated from US macro. Dollar weakness is a tailwind for capital flows
China A50 China Aligned Stimulus expectations and dollar weakness provide a supportive backdrop

Correlation Highlights

The Dollar-Everything Relationship

The Dollar Index at 98.07, falling, is the single most important variable on the grid. A weakening dollar mechanically supports equities (foreign earnings translate higher), gold and silver (priced in dollars, inverse relationship), commodities broadly (except crude, which is fighting its own demand battle), and emerging market assets (dollar debt burden eases).

When the dollar falls and risk assets rise, the correlation is working as expected. When one breaks — as EUR/USD did this week with a mild -0.16% against a falling dollar — it signals a specific idiosyncratic factor overriding the macro correlation. In the euro’s case, the likely driver is European economic data disappointing relative to US resilience.

Gold-Silver Ratio Compression

Gold gained 1.48% while silver gained 3.98%. That is a gold-silver ratio compression, where silver outperforms gold. Historically, this happens in two environments: risk-on with commodity demand (industrial demand for silver adds to the safe-haven bid), or late-stage precious metals rally (silver catches up to gold’s move).

In a late-cycle expansion context, gold-silver compression is consistent with the regime. It does not mean the metals rally is ending — it means it is maturing. The trade is to stay long both but watch for copper confirmation. If copper breaks above 6.15, the industrial demand narrative is real. If copper fades below 6.00, the silver move is speculative and vulnerable.

Crude as the Outlier

Crude oil at -9.41% on the week is the loudest signal on the grid. Every other risk-on asset is green. Crude is deep red. If crude were signalling broad demand destruction, you would expect copper to fall, credit spreads to widen, and the Russell to lag. Instead, copper is up, credit is being accumulated, and the Russell leads at +2.13%.

Current evidence leans toward a supply overshoot rather than demand destruction. The demand picture outside energy is intact. But speculators shorting crude are stretched, and stretched shorts eventually snap back. That makes crude the tail risk on the grid.

Bitcoin’s Risk Appetite Lag

Bitcoin at +3.27% is participating in risk-on but underperforming equities relative to its usual beta. In a typical risk-on week where the S&P 500 (SPY) gains 1.2% and volatility falls, Bitcoin should be up 5–8%. The 3.27% gain is below that range.

Institutional interest is modest — toe-dipping, not conviction. Bitcoin is following, not leading. That matters because Bitcoin has historically been a leading indicator of risk appetite at major turning points. Its decision to follow rather than lead suggests this is a continuation environment, not a fresh breakout.


Multi-Strategy Breakdown

Scalp
SPY + NAS100
Proximity to SPY’s all-time high creates breakout or rejection scalps. NAS100 overbought regime favours mean reversion scalps.
Intraday
Gold + Silver
Cleanest intraday trends. Dollar weakness provides persistent tailwind without requiring catalyst confirmation.
Swing
SPY + Gold + Silver
High alignment supports simultaneous swing longs. All three benefit from dollar weakness — size each at one-third to account for correlation.
Positional
Dollar Short
The structural dollar decline via EUR/GBP long is the cleanest positional trade. Risk: hawkish IMF narrative Monday.

Risk Assessment

Overall Risk
Around 50%

Factors:

  • Around 75% alignment is strong but not unanimous — the crude outlier and EUR contradiction keep risk moderate
  • Crude’s divergence could be a leading indicator of broader weakness, which adds downside risk to the grid
  • Dollar weakness is structural but vulnerable to IMF rhetoric, creating event risk on Monday
  • Bitcoin underperformance suggests risk appetite has limits — a minor flag but worth noting
  • Volatility contango means the market is not pricing near-term disruption, which reduces risk
  • S&P 500 (SPY) at the 99th percentile of its 52-week range means upside is increasingly marginal per unit of risk

Scenario Analysis

Scenario Probability Description Grid Implication
Alignment holds 45% 7+ assets maintain risk-on into mid-week. Dollar continues to weaken All long positions benefit. MAX sizing for top priorities
Crude resolves 25% Crude stabilises or bounces. Grid alignment rises further Energy rotation trade triggers. Full risk-on confirmed
IMF disruption 20% IMF rhetoric shifts rate expectations or growth outlook Dollar reverses temporarily. Gold and equities diverge. Reduce sizing
Crude leads lower 10% Crude weakness proves prophetic. Equities follow with a lag Risk-off. Exit long positions. Raise cash

Experience Level Guide

Beginner: The alignment score is your compass. At around 75%, the environment favours simple long positions in the S&P 500 (SPY) and gold. Do not try to trade the crude divergence or the Bitcoin lag — those are signals for experienced participants.
Intermediate: Use the correlation highlights to build a diversified risk-on book. Long SPY + long gold + long GBP gives you three exposures to the dollar weakness theme through different instruments. Size each position at one-third of normal to account for correlation.
Advanced: The crude outlier is your edge. If you can identify whether crude is signalling supply overshoot or demand destruction before the rest of the market, you have a 48–72 hour head start on the next macro move. As you’ll find in our Institutional Flow and Option Watch briefs, the additional layers of positioning data help resolve that question.

Hedging Recommendations

  • Dollar-correlated portfolio: A small dollar-long position (around 5% of portfolio notional) provides a hedge against temporary dollar reversal across all risk-on positions
  • Crude exposure: If long equities, a small crude put or short crude futures position hedges the “crude leads lower” scenario at minimal cost
  • Gold concentration: Hedge with a small silver short if the gold-silver ratio compresses too rapidly. This is a spread hedge, not a directional one
  • Full grid exposure: Volatility calls at 20 strike are cheap at current contango levels and provide catastrophe insurance

Market Timing Verdicts

Timeframe Verdict Rationale
Short term (1–3 days) Risk-on with event awareness Around 75% alignment. IMF Monday is the variable
Medium term (1–3 weeks) Bullish multi-asset Dollar weakness structural. Metals trend intact. Equities at highs with support
Long term (1–3 months) Selective risk-on Late-cycle narrows the opportunity set. Asset selection matters more than direction

Further Reading

  • As you’ll find in our Positioning Pressure brief, speculative positioning data for every asset on this grid provides the flow foundation
  • As you’ll find in our Macro Pulse brief, the broader cross-asset alignment reading provides the regime context
  • As you’ll find in our Sentiment Shift brief, sentiment and volatility readings confirm the risk-on environment underlying the grid
  • As you’ll find in our Hot Zones brief, the sector heat map is the equity translation of the cross-asset signals here
  • As you’ll find in our Setup Radar brief, priority rankings are direct applications of this grid

Related Intelligence

As you’ll find in our FX Focus brief, where currency flows reflect the cross-border capital movements tracked here.

For the full breakdown, see our Raw Materials Radar brief — where commodity dynamics connect to the global themes we map.


What We Called vs What Happened

Starting this week, every Global Grid brief will include a track record section where we hold ourselves accountable. Our calls from the prior week will be listed alongside the actual market outcome, so you can see exactly how the analysis played out. Expect this section to grow each week with a running accuracy record.

This week’s calls are now on record. Check back in our next edition to see how they resolved.


This is analysis, not financial advice. Always manage your risk.

Analyst Intelligence Update (Saturday 19 April):
The 6/8 risk-on cross-asset read from Friday may shift to 5/8 or 4/8 when markets reprice on Monday. The Strait of Hormuz recorded zero tanker transits on Saturday after a US Navy strike on an Iranian cargo vessel, with negotiations collapsed and escalation rhetoric from both sides. Crude’s Friday collapse was demand-driven, but Monday may see supply-driven movement in the opposite direction. Gold-equity correlation may break as safe haven flows compete with residual risk appetite.
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