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Risk Appetite Explained: How to Identify Risk-On and Risk-Off Markets

By: Matt Weller, Head of Market Research

What is risk appetite and how can it influence equities, currencies, commodities and bonds? More importantly, why can risk appetite sometimes outweigh traditional fundamental and technical signals?

Key Talking Points: 

  • Risk sentiment can sometimes outweigh traditional fundamental and technical signals.
  • Broad alignment across markets helps confirm genuine risk-on or risk-off conditions.
  • Understanding risk appetite can clarify whether markets are trending, range-bound, or nearing a breakout.

Risk appetite is one of the most important underlying forces in global financial markets. It can influence currencies, equities, commodities and fixed income simultaneously, often altering how markets respond to economic data, geopolitical developments and technical patterns.

At its simplest, risk appetite describes the market’s willingness to accept uncertainty in pursuit of return. That willingness is not constant. It expands during periods of confidence and contracts when investors become more defensive.

Understanding that cycle can provide valuable context for interpreting market behavior.

Risk Appetite as the Market’s Tide

One useful analogy is to think of risk appetite as the tide.

When the tide is coming in, many assets associated with economic growth, capital appreciation or higher yields may move in the same broad direction. When the tide is going out, defensive positioning can become dominant, making it more difficult for risk-sensitive assets to advance.

This does not mean every market will move uniformly. Each asset still has its own fundamentals, technical structure and event risks. However, when sentiment becomes sufficiently strong, it can overwhelm those individual influences.

That is why a seemingly convincing technical setup or fundamental narrative may fail to produce the expected market reaction. A more powerful risk-on or risk-off environment may be operating underneath the surface.

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Source: StoneX

Why One Market Is Not Enough

The S&P 500 is often treated as a shorthand measure of global risk sentiment. While it can be useful, no single market provides a complete picture.

An equity rally may reflect company earnings, sector-specific enthusiasm or another localized factor rather than a genuine increase in market-wide risk appetite. Similarly, weakness in stocks does not automatically mean that investors are becoming broadly defensive.

A more reliable approach is to examine several markets at once.

For example, a risk-on environment may include stronger performance from growth-sensitive currencies, cyclical stocks, industrial commodities and lower-quality credit. At the same time, traditional defensive assets may underperform.

The key is not any one movement. It is the degree of alignment across markets that are influenced by different underlying fundamentals.

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Source: StoneX

Correlation, Breadth and Persistence

Three characteristics can help determine whether sentiment is genuinely driving markets: correlation, breadth and persistence.

Correlation refers to whether different assets are moving in a manner consistent with a shared risk theme. Breadth measures how widely that behavior is distributed across markets. Persistence considers whether the alignment continues beyond a brief or isolated reaction.

The more markets that participate, and the longer the relationship holds, the more confidence analysts can have that risk appetite is the common driver.

Possible comparisons include:

  • High-yield bonds versus government bonds
  • Cyclical equities versus defensive sectors
  • Technology stocks versus consumer staples
  • Copper or other industrial commodities versus traditional defensive assets
  • Growth-sensitive currencies versus perceived safe-haven currencies

These relationships are not permanent. Gold, the US dollar, the Japanese yen and other historically defensive assets can behave differently depending on the economic and policy environment. Risk analysis therefore requires observation rather than rigid assumptions.

Risk Appetite Is Not Always Extreme

Markets do not constantly alternate between powerful risk-on and risk-off conditions.

Sentiment can also be neutral. In those periods, individual fundamentals, scheduled economic releases, earnings, interest-rate expectations and technical structures may become more influential.

Recognizing a neutral environment is therefore just as important as identifying an extreme one. It can help explain why cross-market correlations are weak and why individual assets appear to be following their own narratives.

From Market Diagnosis to Strategy Selection

The practical value of risk analysis lies in identifying the type of market environment that is developing.

Strong, broad and persistent sentiment may be associated with sustained trends. Weak or inconsistent risk signals may coincide with range-bound conditions. A shift from neutral sentiment toward greater alignment can also help identify an environment in which volatility or breakouts are becoming more likely.

Risk appetite should not be treated as a precise mechanical signal. It is better viewed as a framework for interpreting market conditions.

By examining multiple asset classes rather than relying on a single benchmark, market participants can develop a more complete understanding of the forces shaping price action, and of when the market’s broader tide may matter more than any individual wave.

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-- Experts: Matt Weller, Global Head of Market ResearchJohn Kicklighter, Global Head of Content

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