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Morning Bid: How much risk can markets swallow?

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on April 23, 2026

3 min read

· Last updated: April 23, 2026

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Morning Bid: How much risk can markets swallow?
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A look at the day ahead in European and global markets from Rae Wee It's hard to pop the champagne when you're constantly looking over your shoulder. Asian stocks took an early lead from Wall Street

How Much Risk Can Markets Absorb Amid Global and European Uncertainty?

Market Reactions and Economic Outlook in a Turbulent Global Landscape

A look at the day ahead in European and global markets from Rae Wee

Asian Market Performance and Geopolitical Tensions

It's hard to pop the champagne when you're constantly looking over your shoulder.

Asian stocks took an early lead from Wall Street on Thursday to scale all-time peaks, though there was hardly much reprieve for investors in the Middle East war as a standoff between Iran and the U.S. persisted.

Positive Economic Signals in Asia

There were good tidings in Asia with SK Hynix setting a record for quarterly profit, South Korea's economy delivering its fastest growth in nearly six years last quarter and Japan's manufacturing activity expanding at its strongest pace in four years in April.

But the big question remains whether that momentum (now mostly historic) will last.

Reversal of Gains and Heightened Risk Aversion

Indexes in Japan, South Korea and Taiwan notched records early in the session, though those gains quickly reversed and it was largely a sea of red across most bourses as the trading day got underway.

Investors are having hard time going all out on risk when Iran has seized two ships in the Strait of Hormuz and as a fragile ceasefire hangs in the balance for now.

U.S. Military Actions and Oil Prices

The U.S. military has meanwhile intercepted at least three Iranian-flagged tankers in Asian waters and is redirecting them away from their positions near India, Malaysia and Sri Lanka, shipping and security sources said.

Brent crude futures were firmly back above $100 a barrel.

European Markets and Corporate Sentiment

It's another busy day for Europe with more corporate earnings and a slew of flash PMI readings from the UK, Germany, France and the broader euro zone due.

Impact of Middle East Conflict on Business and Consumer Confidence

As it is, companies from consumer goods to travel and mining have already struck a cautious tone, warning that the Middle East war is driving up costs, disrupting supply chains and hurting consumer confidence, clouding financial outlooks.

Government Responses to Economic Pressures

Governments are also starting to sound the alarm on the impact higher energy prices are having on their economies.

New Zealand's economic recovery has been delayed but not derailed, Finance Minister Nicola Willis said on Thursday, after the conflict lifted fuel costs and dented business and consumer sentiment.

That comes a day after Germany's economy ministry cut its growth forecasts for 2026 and 2027 and raised its inflation projections.

Key Developments to Watch

Key developments that could influence markets on Thursday:

- UK, France, Germany, euro zone flash PMIs (April)

- Nokia, J Sainsbury, Orion Oyj earnings

(Editing by Sam Holmes)

Key Takeaways

  • SK Hynix reported record quarterly profit, boosted by AI‑driven memory demand, highlighting strong semiconductor fundamentals (newsminimalist.com)
  • Brent crude has firmly reclaimed levels above $100 per barrel amid Middle East tensions—including U.S.–Iran standoff and Strait of Hormuz shipping risks—raising cost‑inflation concerns (apnews.com)
  • European markets face key flash PMI readings from the UK, Germany, France and the euro‑zone, with companies and governments warning that higher energy costs from the Middle East war are weighing on outlooks (e.g., Germany downgraded growth and raised inflation projections) (apnews.com)

References

Frequently Asked Questions

How are global markets reacting to the Middle East conflict?
Global markets are showing caution due to the ongoing Middle East conflict, with risk appetite reduced and market gains reversing early in the Asia session.
What factors are driving volatility in European and Asian markets?
Volatility is driven by geopolitical tensions, corporate earnings, flash PMI data, and concerns over rising energy costs and disrupted supply chains.
How is the Middle East war affecting investor sentiment?
The war is increasing costs, disrupting supply chains, and hurting consumer confidence, which clouds financial outlooks and makes investors wary of risk.
Which countries or indices saw record performance before the reversal?
Japanese, South Korean, and Taiwanese indexes notched records early in the session before gains reversed.

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