市场资讯及洞察

随着伊朗冲突的重塑 能源市场,中央银行转为鹰派,尽管混乱不堪,黄金仍处于自由落体状态,2026年的避险手册比以往任何时候都更加复杂。
事实速览
- 尽管中东战争活跃,但黄金已从历史最高水平下跌了20%以上
- 新加坡元兑美元汇率接近自2014年10月以来的最高水平
- 这个 澳大利亚储备银行(RBA) 由于伊朗推动的油价推动澳大利亚通货膨胀率上升,2026年3月将利率上调至4.10%
1。黄金(XAU/USD)
黄金仍然是全球交易最广泛的避风港。它受益于地缘政治压力、美元疲软和负实际利率环境。但是,它在2026年的短期行为需要解释。
尽管中东战争活跃,但黄金仍大幅抛售。可能的原因是美联储下调了2026年的降息预期,理由是生产者通货膨胀率高于预期, 霍尔木兹海峡-油价推动了通货膨胀的持续性。
归根结底,黄金的牛市取决于实际收益率下降和美元疲软,而目前这两个条件都不具备。交易者应意识到,在像伊朗冲突造成的通货膨胀供应冲击中,黄金的表现并不总是如预期。
但是,如果你缩小视野,长期前景将巩固黄金的避险地位,到2025年成为有记录以来最强劲的年份之一。
值得关注的关键变量:美联储指引、实际收益率和美元方向。
2。日元 (JPY)
由于日本是世界上最大的净债权国,日元长期以来一直是避险货币。在压力时期,日本投资者倾向于汇回资本,推动日元走高。
但是,到目前为止,这种动态似乎在2026年发生了变化。日元同比下跌6.63%,接近2024年7月以来的最低水平,石油进口成本的飙升正在打压该货币。
但是,日元的避险作用并未消失。在股票大幅抛售和流动性事件中,它往往会重新站稳脚跟。但是在石油驱动的通胀冲击中,它面临着结构性阻力。
值得关注的关键变量:日本央行的利率决定、美日收益率差异以及日本当局发出的任何干预信号。
3.瑞士法郎 (CHF)
瑞士的政治中立性、账户盈余和强大的机构框架使法郎成为反身避险货币。与日元不同,瑞士法郎在当前环境中保持不变,2026年法郎兑美元汇率上涨,欧元/瑞郎保持稳定。
对于欧洲和中东的交易者来说,瑞士法郎通常是压力事件中的第一停靠港。
值得关注的关键变量:瑞士国家银行的干预语言、欧洲的地缘政治发展和全球风险指数。
4。美国国债 (US10Y)
在正常情况下,美国政府债券是世界上最大、流动性最高的避险工具。但是 2026 年不是正常情况...
收益率一直在上升,而不是下降,这意味着对于任何寻求安全的人来说,债券价格都朝着错误的方向发展。
当避险事件期间收益率上升时,这表明市场将债券视为通货膨胀风险而不是安全资产。
但是,像票据和2年期国债这样的短期国债则是另一回事。与长期债券相比,它们可能提供更高的收入和更低的期限风险,这就是为什么一些投资者在动荡时期更能防御性地使用它们的原因。
值得关注的关键变量:美联储通讯、消费者价格指数和个人消费支出数据,以及10年期国债收益率是否突破4.50%或回落至4.00%以下。
5。澳元兑美元(澳元/美元):反向竞争
澳元被广泛认为是一种风险货币,与全球大宗商品需求和中国的增长密切相关。
在避险环境中,澳元/美元通常会下跌。澳元/美元下跌可以作为更广泛全球压力的主要指标,这对于具有区域风险敞口的交易者来说可能是一个有用的背景。
澳洲联储的加息周期(自2026年初以来两次加息)为澳元提供了一些下限,但在持续的全球避险走势中,这种支撑是有限的。
值得关注的关键变量:澳大利亚央行前瞻性指导、中国采购经理人指数数据、铁矿石价格以及石油对澳大利亚通胀预期的影响。
6。美元指数(DXY)
在急性压力期间,美元充当世界储备货币和反身避风港。当流动性枯竭时,无论潜在趋势如何,全球对美元的需求往往会激增。
在过去的12个月中,由于全球对美国财政轨迹的信心动摇,美元已经下跌。但在过去的一个月中,在鹰派美联储和地缘政治风险上升的支持下,它已经走强。
在避险环境中,美元继续吸引避险资金流动。但是,油价上涨会增加通货膨胀风险,使美联储的政策预期复杂化。
值得关注的关键变量:美联储利率路径、美国通胀数据和全球流动性状况。
7。新加坡元 (SGD)
新加坡元是当前环境中最具弹性的货币之一,在全球范围内鲜为人知,但在整个东南亚都具有很高的相关性。
在避险资金流和投资者被新加坡AAA评级债券、股息密集的股票市场和可预测的政府政策所吸引的支持下,新加坡元已升至接近2014年10月以来的最高水平。
新加坡金融管理局通过名义有效汇率区间而不是利率来管理新加坡元,使其具有与其他避险货币不同的性质。
对于有印尼、马来西亚、泰国、越南和更广泛的东盟地区敞口的交易者来说,美元/新加坡元可以作为区域风险偏好的实用基准。
值得关注的关键变量:新加坡金融管理局的政策区间调整、区域贸易流动以及更广泛的美元/亚洲动态。
8。现金和短期固定收益
有时,最有效的避风港可以简单地减少暴露。由于主要经济体的中央银行利率仍处于较高水平,现金和短期政府债券可以在不受市场风险影响的同时提供可观的收益率。
澳洲联储在3月份的会议上将现金利率提高至4.10%。英格兰银行维持在3.75%,而欧洲央行将其存款便利利率维持在2.00%,主要再融资利率维持在2.15%。 在所有主要经济体中,短期政府票据多年来首次提供了实际回报。
在动荡的环境中,资本保值有时比回报最大化更重要。
值得关注的关键变量:所有主要经济体的中央银行会议日历,以及利率路径前瞻性指导的任何变化。
接下来要看什么
美联储通胀数据。 核心个人消费支出是目前黄金、债券和美元最重要的单一数据点。任何一个方向上的任何惊喜都可能同时移动所有这三个方向。
日元干预风险。 日元接近此前引发日本当局行动的水平。具有亚太地区风险敞口的交易者应密切关注。
澳洲联储的下一步行动。 澳大利亚目前为4.10%,通货膨胀率仍高于目标,问题在于徒步周期是否还有更长的路要走。下一次澳洲联储会议将于5月5日举行。
地缘政治轨迹。 任何缓和中东局势的举措都将迅速减少避险需求,并将资本转回风险资产。反之亦然。
中国的增长信号。 中国复苏强于预期,可能会提振大宗商品货币,降低整个亚太地区的防御地位。
长期镜头
2026年的环境表明,避险资产的有效性取决于 类型 令人震惊,而不仅仅是其严重性。
伊朗冲突造成的通货膨胀供应冲击是传统避风港最困难的环境之一。
随着实际收益率的上升,黄金下跌。随着通货膨胀预期的攀升,债券抛售。随着日本进口成本的飙升,即使是日元也可能贬值。
无论宏观条件如何,都保持着机构信誉、管理框架和充足流动性的资产。瑞士法郎、新加坡元和短期现金工具比目前的黄金或多头债券更符合这种描述。
在2026年,交易者面临的问题不是 “哪个避风港?”它是 “避风港,避开什么?”

There has been quite a lot of talk about oil in the news recently with some analysts suggesting the price could reach $100 per barrel, which would be the highest since 2014. Whether that will happen, that is another story. In this article, we take a look at world’s largest crude oil exporters.
Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia is the world’s largest crude oil exporter with $133,6 billion worth of oil exports in 2017 which was around 15,9% of the total crude oil exports in the world. The middle eastern country is highly reliant on its oil exports and it has the 2nd largest proven oil reserves in the world. In recent years, we have seen the Kingdom announce ''Saudi Vision 2030'' which outlines plans to diversify its economy to reduce its dependence on oil.
One of the most notable plans is the new city called Neom, you can find out more about the ambitious city plan by clicking here. Capital: Riyadh Official language: Arabic Population: 33,000,000 Gross Domestic Product: $683 billion Currency: Saudi riyal (SAR) Russia Russia is world’s second largest crude oil exporter at with $93,3 billion (11,1% of the total) worth of oil exports last year. Russia is the biggest country in the world and has the 11th largest economy in the world at $1,5 trillion, according to the World Bank.
It’s biggest export partners are the European Union, China and neighbour Belarus. Russia is 8th on the list of world’s largest proven oil reserves. Capital: Moscow Official language: Russian Population: 144,526,636 Gross Domestic Product: $1,5 trillion Currency: Russian ruble (RUB) Iraq Iraq is third on the list with $61,5 billion worth of oil exports in 2017, 7,3% of the total.
Iraq was one of the founding member Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) with Iran, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and Venezuela when it was established back in 1960. Iraq’s economy is highly depended on oil with oil production accounting for 2/3 of the country’s GDP. Capital: Baghdad Official language: Arabic and Kurdish Population: 37,202,671 Gross Domestic Product: $202 billion Currency: Iraqi dinar (IQD) Canada The North American country is the fourth largest crude oil exporter in 2017 with $54 billion worth of crude oil exports (6,4% of the total).
Canada has the 3rd largest proven oil reserves with 95% of these reserves are in the oil sands deposits in the western province of Alberta. Capital: Ottawa Official language: English and French Population: 37,067,011 Gross Domestic Product: $1,6 trillion Currency: Canadian dollar (CAD) United Arab Emirates The United Arab Emirates, the third largest economy in the Middle East is the 5th largest crude oil exporter with $49,3 billion worth of oil exports in 2017 (5.9% of the total). Even though United Arab Emirates has the most diversified economy in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), a regional intergovernmental political and economic union which is made up of all Arab countries of the Persian Gulf, it is still highly dependent on oil.
Capital: Abu Dhabi Official language: Arabic Population: 9,575,729 Gross Domestic Product: $382 billion Currency: UAE dirham (AED) This article is written by a GO Markets Analyst and is based on their independent analysis. They remain fully responsible for the views expressed as well as any remaining error or omissions. Trading Forex and Derivatives carries a high level of risk.
Click here for more information on trading oil commodities.

Time Ticking for Brexit By Klavs Valters In just over a year – on 29 th March 2019 to be exact – Britain is scheduled to leave the European Union. It has been nearly a year since Theresa May triggered Article 50 and began the two-year process to negotiate an exit deal. As we know, the negotiations so far can’t be classed as successful.
Even though a breakthrough on the key issues of the deal (the Irish border, divorce bill, citizens’ rights and the European Court of Justice) was made back in December last year, there hasn’t been a great deal of clarity on how the relationship will look moving forward. A No-Deal Scenario A no deal would be bad news for both parties involved and could potentially cost £58 billion a year, with Britain’s financial sector taking the largest hit, according to a new research. The additional direct “red-tape cost” of tariff and non-tariff barriers would be £27 billion to UK firms and £31 billion to their EU counterparts, a report from global management consulting firm Oliver Wyman and law firm Clifford Chance estimates. “These increased costs and uncertainty threaten to reduce profitability and pose existential threats to some businesses ” the report stated.
Britain’s relationship with the EU would revert to World Trade Organisation (WTO) rules if no deal is in place by the end of a transitional period. This is set to start after the official Brexit deadline in March 2019 – a scenario which both sides would like to avoid. Five sectors – finance, automotive, agriculture, food and drink, and consumer goods would bear 70% of the burden of additional costs resulting from this scenario, according to the report.
The financial services industry would be hit the hardest and we are seeing some of the largest financial firms making plans of relocating their staff to other European Union countries. Last week, UBS and Goldman Sachs announced they had begun to transfer jobs to Frankfurt in preparation for Brexit. The Bank of England has also warned that around 10,000 jobs from the financial sector might leave by the end of next year because of Brexit.
Financial Markets GBP/USD Source: GO Markets MT4 At the end of January, we saw the Pound strengthen to its highest level since the Brexit referendum was announced. Since then we have seen the Pound weaken slightly against the US Dollar and currently trading at around 1.38 level (as of 13/3/18). EUR/GBP Source: GO Markets MT4 There hasn’t been too much movement against the Euro in recent months, however further developments in the talks will certainly have an impact moving forward.
The Euro currently trading at around 0.88 level against the Pound (as of 13/3/18). FTSE100 Source: GO Markets MT4 Since reaching its lowest level since the end of 2016 of around 6916, the FTSE100 has somewhat recovered the losses and currently trading at 7213 level (as of 13/3/18). Theresa May has repeatedly said that she wants a “strong and special relationship” and “Canada style trade deal” with the European Union and in every speech since the process began.
This hasn’t however given the public much clarity or confidence in what will happen. With the exit date just around the corner, can the “strong and stable” leader deliver the Brexit people of the UK voted for?

Last year the total sales of gold exports reached $310 billion mark. The top 5 countries made up a large portion of the total gold exports last year with shipments accounting to more than $177 billion, which was 57.30% of the world total. In 2011 we saw the price of gold reach record highs at over $1,900.
Since then we have seen the price fall and currently trading at around $1,219 level. In this article, we will take a look at the top 5 biggest gold exporters in the world. XAU/USD Monthly Chart Switzerland Switzerland was the largest gold exporter of gold in 2017 with $67.9 billion worth of exports which was around 21.9% of the total.
European Union is Switzerland ’s largest trading partner with 46.6% of all Swiss exports by value being delivered to the EU. Switzerland has the 20th largest economy in the world at $678 billion and 3rd in the world per capita at $80,189. Capital: Bern Official languages: German, French and Italian Population: 8,508,898 Gross Domestic Product: $678 billion Currency: Swiss Franc (CHF) Hong Kong Hong Kong, officially known as Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of the People’s Republic of China is the second largest exporter in the world with exports worth up to $52.2 billion, 16.8% of the total in 2017.
Hong Kong has the 33rd largest economy in the world at $341 billion and 16th per capita at $46,193. Hong Kong is the 2nd largest foreign exchange market in Asia and 4th largest in the world in 2016 with a daily average turnover of forex transaction reaching $437 billion, according to the Bank for International Settlements. Official languages: Chinese and English Population: 7,448,900 Gross Domestic Product: $341 billion Currency: Hong Kong Dollar (HKD) United Arab Emirates The United Arab Emirates is the third largest exporter of gold with $20.7 billion or 6.7% of the total world exports in 2017.
The United Arab Emirates has world’s 19th largest economy at $638 billion, and it’s the third largest in the Middle East, behind Saudi Arabia and Iran. Capital: Abu Dhabi Official language: Arabic Population: 9,575,729 Gross Domestic Product: $383 billion Currency: UAE dirham (AED) United States With exports worth $19.8 billion, United States is the fourth on the list of the largest exporters of gold which is about 6.4% of the world total. As you probably may know, the US has the largest economy in the world at a whopping $19 trillion.
Even though the US has the largest economy in the world, it also tops the list for the country with the largest total debt at over $18 trillion. Capital: Washington D.C. Official language: English Population: 325,719,178 Gross Domestic Product: $19 trillion Currency: United States Dollar (USD) United Kingdom The United Kingdom is fifth on the list of the largest gold exporters in the world at $17 billion worth of exports in 2017, which is 5.5% of the world total.
Same as on this list, it is also the fifth largest economy in the world at $2.6 trillion total Gross Domestic Product. United Kingdom is the home of the world’s second largest financial center in London, according to the Global Financial Centres Index (GFCI) report. Capital: London Official language: English Population: 66,040,229 Gross Domestic Product: $2.6 trillion Currency: Pound Sterling (GBP) This article is written by a GO Markets Analyst and is based on their independent analysis.
They remain fully responsible for the views expressed as well as any remaining error or omissions. Trading Forex and Derivatives carries a high level of risk. Sources: Go Markets MT4, Google, Datawrapper

By Deepta Bolaky Trade and geopolitical risks were at the forefront of the meltdown that rattled the markets on Friday. Turkey’s currency crisis prompted a massive sell-off across the markets hitting the European banking sectors the hardest. Fears began to mount as investors freted its rippling effects on the global markets.
The current risks and a hawkish Fed are giving rise to the “Strong Dollar Story” which are putting pressure on developed and emerging economies. Emerging markets are mostly being hit by rising protectionist measures and US sanctions. There was growing interest in the Earning Markets and the overall outlook was promising until rising protectionist measures started kicking-in.
Contagion Effect A diplomatic row between the US and Turkey sparked a contagion fear globally, resulting into new “lows” in the Forex markets at a time where major currencies were already facing a strong US dollar. EURUSD – Banking contagion The Turkish lira lost more than 13% against the dollar on Friday. The weakness in the Lira has elevated Turkey’s debt burden and the ECB expressed its concerns about the exposure of the European banks with Turkey.
The shared currency slipped on Friday and EURUSD fell to one- year low. Even though the contagion might have some lingering effects in the eurozone banking sector in the short-term, we note that bank supervisors might be able to pull tools at their disposal to contain the damage in the long-run. The key risk for the Euro might therefore be the policy divergence.
On the technical side, the pair has formed a descending triangle which indicates a bearish formation whereas the RSI value is currently at 28.916 indicating oversold conditions. The overall situation may suggest that EURUSD could bounce off before incurring deeper losses. NZDUSD – NZ-US interest rate advantage The New Zealand dollar was dragged down by subdued fundamentals at a time where the NZ-US interest rate advantage has been eroded.
The Kiwi was battered by the dovish statement by the RBNZ and the contagion fears following the currency crisis in Turkey. A sour risk tone in the markets is hauling the NZD pairs from a” negative” to a “bearish” outlook. The NZDUSD pair dropped to two-year low.
The pair has made a minor bounce back. Any move passed last week’s lowest level would most likely indicate the presence of sellers and can potentially drag the pair pass the 0.6400 level. Any sustained move above 0.6570 level will signal presence of buyers.
This can also be the profit-taking or counter-trend buying. AUDUSD The Australian Dollar is also feeling the heat of the geopolitical risks and a dovish RBA. The week kicked off on a sour note and AUDUSD fell below an important trendline at 0.7350.
The slide can continue if the contagion fears escalate in the Eurozone and risk aversion persists. AUDUSD bounced back after gapping lower on Monday. It is currently trading in the one-year low range.
Technically, the pair is also in a descending triangle suggesting a bearish trend but traders should keep an eye on the RSI which is moving towards the oversold conditions. This situation can also be driven by some short-covering rallies. GBPUSD- Brexit saga The pair is trapped at the 12-month lows as the volatility of a “no-deal” Brexit has increased.
The Sterling was already on the backfoot with the Brexit tensions and a full-blown return of risk aversion could open up further downside opportunities for the Cable. GBP bulls will have to rely on a series of data scheduled over the week for fresh impetus. Moving on to the emerging markets, contagion is the “buzzword of the week” and appears to be flowing through the emerging markets.
Emerging currencies are sliding under the influence of a stronger US dollar and currency crisis in Turkey. The rising contagion fears has even caused a flash crash in the South African Rand. As of this writing, Turkey’s central bank has announced intervention measures which is bringing some relief and toning down the bearish outlook in the Forex and equity markets.

The Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) made its first interest rate decision and monetary policy, but it was not what the market participants expected. The Central Bank did not follow the same dovish theme seen by other central banks. The Official Cash Rate (OCR) was left at 1.75%, as widely expected, and the RBNZ expects to keep the OCR at this level through 2019 and 2020. “The direction of our next OCR move could be up or down.” Governor Adrian Orr has downplayed the odds of a rate cut but has not entirely removed it off the table.
Given the global risks and uncertainties, the chance of a rate cut is not eliminated but has not increased either. NZDUSD jumped on the signals to hold on to rates though to 2020 while the AUDNZD dropped by almost the same extent. We saw movements above 100 pips following the Rate Statement.
AUDUSD, which is highly correlated with the NZDUSD, added a few pips and built on gains from the uptick in the Westpac Consumer Confidence released before the RBNZ’s interest rate decision. The RBNZ strikes a “data-dependent” approach and says that they are comfortable with the inflation target and mid-point pressures. The Governor stretched that “ they need data from the financial markets around how they are pricing and seeing the risks as well.” When asked about the rise in unemployment, Orr mentioned that “ the surveys are not reflecting what we hear about the business tables”, and that “employment is near its maximum sustainable level".
Overall, the big picture here is that the RBNZ appears more confident that other central banks on its outlook for the New Zealand economy. The Central Bank noted that the low-interest rates and expected government spending would eventually support a pick-up in Gross Domestic Product over 2019. This article is written by a GO Markets Analyst and is based on their independent analysis.
They remain fully responsible for the views expressed as well as any remaining error or omissions. Trading Forex and Derivatives carries a high level of risk. For more information on trading Forex, check out our regular free Forex webinars.

Source: Bloomberg Terminal For the traders returning from the Christmas break, the sudden surge in the Dow Jones Industrial Average is probably the main event of significance to monitor. Major US equity benchmarks experienced the biggest daily gain in a decade. Until recently, those benchmarks were flirting with the bear market levels.
What has changed? “ A tremendous opportunity to buy ” and “ I have great confidence in our companies. ” were the comments from President Trump on the stock markets. The President may have encouraged the “buy-and-dip” strategy so when Amazon reported record-breaking sales, bulls came in with force, and Wall Street soared. The Dow surged by more than 1000 points on Wednesday, preventing the benchmark from falling into a bear market territory.
The technology and energy sector were among the best performing-sectors. Source: Bloomberg Terminal The S&P 500 also rose by 5%, and 11 sectors within the benchmark were trading in positive territory. The technology, consumer discretionary and energy sectors were leading the gains while the material sector was on the back foot dragged by metals and mining stocks.
US500 Source: Bloomberg Terminal Nasdaq Composite also added 5.84% after suffering the worst Christmas-eve session. The wave of selling was halted on Wednesday. Consequently, Asian stocks and the Australian equity benchmark are finding support from a historic night on Wall Street.
World Equity Indices Amid the recent ‘Global Stock Rout’ the S&P TSX ended October down 6.51% following a somewhat hard month. However, during this risk-off flight to safety, the S&P TSX Index may have had its pain exacerbated by the heavy makeup of energy companies populating the Canadian index. As discussed in previous articles - Oil - Can basic Economics be responsible for an 11% decline – Oil has seen some very aggressive sell-offs.
Current market conditions have the commodity breaking below the $50 a barrel level amid supply concerns and growing global tensions. Keep in mind with Canada’s energy companies occupying an 18.6% weighting of the S&P TSX; undoubtedly this has been a weight around the Index’s neck dragging it lower. Source: Bloomberg Terminal Investors welcomed the relief rally.
However, it may be too early to cheer up the recovery as the equity markets are still battling weak fundamentals, concerns over slow growth, trade tensions, political turmoil and higher borrowing costs.
