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When the Trump administration pushed global tariffs to 15% in late February, geopolitical risk in the Middle East flared again, and Kevin Warsh's nomination to chair the Federal Reserve sent a hawkish jolt through bond markets, gold did the thing gold is expected to do in periods of stress. It went up.
Bitcoin did something different. It tracked the Nasdaq. From its October 2025 peak above US$126,000, it fell nearly 50% to the high US$60,000s by early March. The divergence is the story. Gold acted more like a refuge. Bitcoin acted more like a high-beta tech stock with extra leverage strapped on.
For a CFD trader, meaning anyone trading the price move with borrowed exposure rather than owning the underlying, that distinction is not academic. It tells you what you are actually trading when you take a position in either market.
What drove the move
| Driver | Gold | Bitcoin |
|---|---|---|
| Macro trigger | Tariffs, Middle East risk, hawkish Fed signals | Followed Nasdaq lower; tech sell-off contagion |
| Structural buyer | Central banks buying ~190 tonnes per quarter | Spot ETFs and institutional adoption |
| Leverage risk | Crowded long positions; sharp liquidity-driven sell-offs possible | Over US$20 billion in futures wiped in one week (Oct 2025) |
| Risk model treatment | Crisis hedge, currency debasement play | Bucketed with tech equities by algorithmic desks |
Gold is being lifted by three currents at once: central bank stockpiling, investor demand as a hedge against currency debasement, and reactive inflows on tariff and geopolitical headlines.
Bitcoin's drivers are noisier especially as it still benefits from institutional adoption, spot exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and a long-running narrative about being "digital gold". But its short-term price is increasingly set by leverage. Algorithmic risk desks now bucket Bitcoin alongside tech equities, so when the VIX, Wall Street's fear gauge, spikes, those models may cut Bitcoin exposure automatically. That is mechanical, not philosophical.
Why the market cares
That is why two assets both routinely labelled "safe havens" can trade in opposite directions on the same day.
What CFD traders can watch
- US dollar index (DXY) direction
- Real yields on inflation-protected Treasuries
- Central bank purchase data (quarterly updates)
- Geopolitical headline tape, especially Middle East
- Positioning data: crowded long trades can reverse sharply
- Nasdaq futures as a leading sentiment signal
- Funding rate on perpetual swaps
- ETF flow data
- Open interest in derivatives markets
- VIX levels: fear-driven algorithmic risk cuts
The catch with gold is that the run already looks stretched. The roughly 14% drop across a couple of January sessions was a reminder that crowded trades cut both ways, especially when leveraged institutions need to raise cash and sell what is liquid. Bitcoin can move several percent in an hour for reasons that have nothing to do with the macro story in the morning's news. With CFD leverage, that volatility is amplified in both directions.
What could go wrong
New Fed leadership comes in more hawkish than markets expect, pushing real yields higher and weakening gold's tailwind.
Gold is not cheap. Crowded long trades are vulnerable to sharp sell-offs even when the longer-term thesis is intact.
Central bank buying slows or reverses, removing a key structural support for prices.
The "digital gold" thesis does not hold during acute stress; Bitcoin can sell off with risk assets when fear spikes.
A recession before central banks ease could deepen short-term pressure before any recovery.
Regulatory shifts, exchange failures, or leverage flushes can trigger sharp, non-linear moves.
The bottom line
Gold and Bitcoin are not the same trade in different clothes. Gold has behaved more like an old-school crisis hedge in 2026. Bitcoin has behaved more like a leveraged growth asset that performs best when central banks are pumping liquidity into the system. Both can be useful to track via CFDs. Neither is a guaranteed shelter. Knowing which one you are actually trading, and why, is the difference between hedging risk and accidentally doubling up on it.
Trade CFDs across global markets
Follow the themes that move markets and take positions with a defined risk plan.

Markets enter May with the federal funds target range at 3.50% to 3.75%, the Fed having concluded its 28-29 April meeting, and the next decision not due until 16-17 June. Brent crude is trading near US$108 per barrel, with the IEA describing the ongoing Iran conflict as the largest energy supply shock on record as the Strait of Hormuz remains effectively closed.
The macro tension this month is straightforward but uncomfortable: an oil-driven inflation impulse landing into a labour market that surprised to the upside in March, while Q1 growth came in soft.
The Federal Reserve has revised its 2026 PCE inflation projection to 2.7% and continues to signal one cut this year, though the timing remains contested. With no FOMC scheduled in May, every high-impact release may carry more weight than usual into the June meeting.
Fed Funds Rate
3.50% to 3.75%
Next FOMC
16-17 June 2026
Brent Crude
~US$108
Key data events
6+ high-impact releases
Growth: business activity and demand
The growth picture entering May is mixed. The Q1 GDP advance estimate landed on 30 April, while softer retail sales and inventory data have made the demand picture harder to read.
ISM manufacturing has been a quieter source of optimism, with recent prints holding in expansionary territory. Energy costs and tariff effects are now the variables most likely to shape the next move in business activity.
Key dates (AEST)
What markets look for
- Whether manufacturing PMI holds above 50, with the prices paid sub-index giving a read on input cost pressure
- Services PMI as a check on the larger share of the US economy, particularly employment and prices
- Retail sales control group, which feeds into consumption forecasts
- Any sign that sustained Brent crude above US$100 is starting to affect household spending
| Scenario | Treasuries | USD | Equities |
|---|---|---|---|
| Activity data prints firmer | ↑ Yields rise | ↑ Firmer | Mixed - depends on valuation stretch |
| Activity data softens | ↓ Yields fall | ↓ Softer | Support if inflation cooperates |
Labour: payrolls and employment data
The April Employment Situation is one of the most concentrated risk events of the month. March payrolls came in stronger than expected, while earlier data revisions left the trend less clear. April will help show whether the labour market is genuinely re-accelerating or simply absorbing seasonal noise.
Key dates (AEST)
What markets may watch
- Headline non-farm payrolls (NFP) and the size of any prior-month revisions
- Average hourly earnings, with energy-driven cost pressure keeping wage growth in focus
- Unemployment rate and labour force participation
- Sector mix, including whether goods-producing payrolls show signs of disruption
| Scenario | Treasuries | USD | Equities |
|---|---|---|---|
| Firm NFP/wage growth | ↑ Yields rise | ↑ Strength | Pressure on valuations |
| Soft NFP/weak print | ↓ Yields fall | ↓ Softer | Mixed - risk of growth scare |
Inflation: CPI, PPI and PCE
April inflation lands as the most market-relevant data block of the month. The March consumer price index (CPI) rose 3.3% over the prior 12 months, with energy up 10.9% on the month and gasoline up 21.2%, accounting for almost three quarters of the headline increase. With Brent holding near US$105 to US$108 through the latter half of April, a further passthrough into the April CPI energy component looks plausible.
Core CPI and core personal consumption expenditures (PCE) remain the better read on underlying trend.
Key dates (AEST)
What markets may watch
- Headline CPI year on year, especially the gasoline component
- Core CPI, including shelter, services excluding shelter and core goods
- PPI as a read on producer-level passthrough from energy and tariffs
- Core PCE, which remains the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge
| Scenario | Treasuries | USD | Commodities |
|---|---|---|---|
| Inflation cools/surprises lower | ↓ Yields fall | ↓ Softer | Gold consolidation |
| Headline runs hot/core sticky | ↑ Yields rise | ↑ Strength | Gold supported on stagflation risk |
Policy, trade and earnings
May has no FOMC meeting, so policy attention shifts to Fed speakers, the path of any leadership transition, and the dominant geopolitical backdrop. Chair Jerome Powell's term concludes around the middle of the month. President Donald Trump has nominated Kevin Warsh as the next Fed chair, with the Senate Banking Committee having held a confirmation hearing.
The Iran conflict, now in its ninth week, remains the single largest source of macro tail risk, with the Strait of Hormuz blockade and stalled US-Iran talks setting the tone for energy markets and broader risk appetite. Q1 earnings season is in its peak weeks, with peak weeks expected between 27 April and 15 May, and 7 May the most active reporting day.
What to monitor this month
- Iran-US negotiations and the operational status of the Strait of Hormuz
- Fed speakers and any change in tone between meetings
- Q1 earnings, especially from retail, energy and cyclical names
- Weekly EIA crude inventories
- Any tariff-related announcements that may affect inflation expectations
Bottom line
May is not a quiet month just because there is no FOMC meeting. Payrolls, CPI, PPI, retail sales and PCE all land before the June policy decision, while oil remains the dominant external shock.
For markets, the key question is whether the data points to a temporary energy-driven inflation lift, or a broader inflation problem arriving at the same time as softer growth. That distinction may shape the next major move in bonds, the US dollar, gold and equity indices.

Asia-Pacific markets start May with a more complicated macro backdrop than earlier in 2026. Regional growth has shown resilience, but higher energy prices are testing inflation expectations, trade balances and policy flexibility across fuel-importing economies.
For traders, the month's focus is likely to sit across three linked areas.
Activity data
April CPI, PPI and purchasing managers' index (PMI)
BOJ signals
Corporate goods prices and April CPI
RBA decision
Statement on Monetary Policy and April CPI
Energy volatility
Trade-sensitive sentiment
China
China remains central to the May Asia-Pacific market drivers outlook because its data can influence commodity demand, regional equities and the Australian dollar. The April data round may help traders assess whether the early-year recovery is broadening or still reliant on production, exports and policy support.
Key Dates (AEST)- Whether CPI data suggest demand-led inflation or continued subdued household pricing power
- Whether PPI data point to improving factory margins or cost pressure from energy and raw materials
- Whether retail sales show a firmer household sector or continued reliance on production and exports
- Whether property data continue to weigh on confidence, construction demand and local government revenue
China data can influence sentiment toward Asian equities, iron ore, copper, energy markets and the Australian dollar. Stronger domestic demand may support commodity-linked sentiment, while softer retail or property figures may keep markets focused on policy support and downside growth risks.
Japan inflation and BOJ signals
Japan's May calendar is less about a fresh BOJ rate decision and more about how markets interpret the April policy meeting, inflation data and wage-sensitive price trends. That matters because Japanese government bond yields and the yen remain sensitive to any shift in policy normalisation expectations.
Key Dates (AEST)- Whether the BOJ still sees conditions for gradual policy normalisation, or whether energy-driven inflation complicates the outlook.
- Whether goods and services inflation remain consistent with the 2% inflation objective.
- Whether corporate goods prices reflect energy cost pass-through into producer pricing.
- Whether Tokyo CPI points to firm or easing near-term price pressure ahead of the June meeting.
Japan’s data can influence yen volatility, Japanese government bond yields and the Nikkei 225. A stronger inflation pulse may support expectations for tighter policy over time, but energy-driven inflation can also pressure households and corporate margins. That balance may keep yen and equity reactions data-dependent.
Australia and the RBA decision
Australia has one of the clearest domestic policy events in the region in May. The RBA's Monetary Policy Board meets on 4 and 5 May, with the decision statement and Statement on Monetary Policy due at 2:30 pm AEST on 5 May. The Governor's media conference follows at 3:30 pm AEST.
Key Dates (AEST)- Whether the RBA gives more weight to inflation persistence or household demand risks in its decision statement.
- Whether the Statement on Monetary Policy adjusts inflation, growth or labour market assumptions from the February update.
- Whether April CPI confirms or challenges the inflation narrative after the May decision.
- Whether labour conditions remain firm enough, with unemployment at 4.3% in March, to keep services inflation in focus.
Australia’s May data may influence AUD/USD, ASX 200 rate-sensitive sectors and short-end bond yields. A firmer inflation profile could support expectations for a restrictive RBA stance, while softer activity or household signals may limit how far markets price additional tightening. For index CFDs and forex CFDs, this is the highest-signal domestic event of the month.
Regional swing factors
Energy remains the main cross-market risk for May. Higher oil and gas prices can lift inflation, widen trade gaps and reduce policy space, particularly for economies dependent on imported fuel such as Japan, South Korea and parts of South-East Asia.
ASEAN purchasing managers' index releases may indicate whether manufacturing momentum is broadening or losing speed. The Australian dollar, New Zealand dollar and Asian FX may remain sensitive to China data and global risk appetite. Iron ore and energy prices may influence Australia and China-linked equities. The RBA, BOJ and People's Bank of China face different inflation and growth trade-offs, and energy supply concerns may continue to shape inflation expectations and risk sentiment across the region.
Key watchlist
Top China Data Point
18 May activity data, particularly retail sales and property indicators
Top Japan Event
12 May BOJ Summary of Opinions from the April meeting
Top Australia Event
5 May RBA decision and Statement on Monetary Policy
Main Regional Wildcard
Energy price volatility linked to Middle East developments
Most Sensitive Market
AUD/USD, given its link to China demand and RBA repricing risk
Key Condition Shift
Evidence that inflation pressure is becoming persistent rather than mainly energy-led
May’s Asia-Pacific calendar gives markets several points to reassess the region’s inflation, growth and policy mix. China data may shape commodity and risk sentiment, while Japan’s inflation signals and the RBA decision will guide rate pricing.
Energy remains the primary regional risk. If inflation pressure appears more persistent rather than energy-led, markets will become increasingly sensitive to central bank communication and yield repricing.
Watching Asia-Pacific moves today?
Track Asia-Pacific themes and monitor moves as they unfold.
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