Global Market Sentiment Weakens, Tone in UK, US Negative
Global market sentiment weakened at the start of the new week, with the aggregate market sentiment gauge falling to 0.29 from 0.18 last week, on a scale from +1 (bullish) to 1 (bearish), analysts said in a note.
While the overall tone remains bearish with medium confidence, First National Bank (FNB) said in a report that the shift reflects rising investor caution rather than outright stress, as markets reassess the balance between inflation, monetary policy, growth risks and geopolitics.
In the United States (US), sentiment has turned mildly negative and deteriorated materially, with concerns centred on tariff effects, sticky inflation and oil prices above $90/barrel, First National Bank (FNB) said in a note.
Analysts said these factors have added complexity to the Fed’s policy path, constraining its ability to pivot while also raising the risk of economic growth fatigue.
The tone in the United Kingdom (UK) is clearly negative, driven by geopolitical tension and commodity-price stress, leaving investor positioning selective rather than constructive and heavily influenced by external shocks.
Sentiment in the eurozone has also turned more negative, reflecting the region’s sensitivity to energy and fuel supply disruptions, which are weighing on confidence across aviation, logistics and industrial activity.
In China, economic and technical readings are mildly negative and weaker than last week, as cross border tensions, soft demand signals and trade-related uncertainty continue to cap confidence.
Market sentiment in Japan has slipped to mildly negative, with external uncertainty and price pressures overshadowing supportive domestic dynamics.
In South Africa (SA), the relative outlier, sentiment remains mildly positive, though it has deteriorated materially. The more constructive skew remains conditional, challenged by global oil, inflation and geopolitical risks.
Across regions, sentiment is being shaped less by a single dominant narrative and more by the interaction of elevated oil prices, inflation uncertainty, geopolitical strain and trade frictions.
Higher energy prices are amplifying both inflation concerns and recession fears, while tariffs continue to blur the distinction between temporary and sticky price pressures.
As a result, the week ahead is still negative in outright balance. Markets remain cautious and fragmented, favouring selective positioning and rapid reassessment of headlines rather than a full risk-on posture.
Investment analysts said that until there is clearer evidence that these pressures are easing, sentiment is likely to remain vulnerable to sharp and abrupt shifts. Money Market Rates Diverge as Liquidity Surplus Eases

