Top 10 A+ EARLY RISK-OFF — GD, RTX, LLY, PG, AMGN, MU, SAP, ASML, EWY, GLD
Regime: Early Risk-Off (score 0.518) — Markets reopen Monday after Good Friday with the Iran war entering its sixth week but no longer accelerating. VIX dropped from 26.38 to 23.87 — still elevated but the direction is improving. The S&P 500 closed at 6,528.52 (-1.22%) on April 2, testing the critical 200-day moving average at 6,644. A decisive break above that level would shift the regime toward Neutral. The Strait of Hormuz remains under Iranian selective blockade (volumes down 93%), keeping oil prices elevated, but indirect ceasefire talks via Pakistan show the first signs of diplomatic movement.
Key levels (April 2 close): S&P 500 6,528.52 (-1.22%), NASDAQ -1.62%, Dow -1.29%, Russell 2000 +0.64%. VIX 23.87 (declining). Gold $4,694 (record high then pullback), WTI crude ~$103 (off $107 highs). DXY ~100.14. 10Y yield ~4.32%. BTC $66,650, ETH $2,046. ISM Services PMI due Monday 10am ET (consensus 55.0 vs prior 56.1).
Key catalysts for Monday April 6: (1) ISM Non-Manufacturing PMI — consensus 55.0, key barometer for services sector health, below 53 = recession alarm; (2) Iran ceasefire talks via Pakistan — US April 6 deadline for Hormuz reopening, any headline = oil/defense swing; (3) S&P 200-day MA test — 6,644 is the line in the sand for bulls; (4) FOMC minutes + CPI later this week — March CPI expected to show energy-driven inflation spike; (5) Q1 earnings preview — S&P 500 EPS growth expected +13%, strong backdrop; (6) April seasonal strength — historically best month for equities, short-term bullish bias for 2-4 weeks.
⚠️ Retrospective note: Suite aux rétrospectives (B+*, B+), we rotate away from concentrated energy exposure (24 open positions in energy/commodities already). Focus shifts to defense (GD, RTX), healthcare (LLY, AMGN), consumer staples (PG), and tech momentum (MU, ASML). Gold (GLD) remains core as war premium persists. EU diversification via SAP, ASML. Asia via EWY (Korean recovery play). Stops widened 1.2x ATR per retro feedback on whipsaw stops.
The regime score stands at 0.518, classified as Early Risk-Off — an improvement from last week’s full Risk-Off (0.423). Component scores: SPX breadth 0.588 (recovering, Russell 2000 divergence positive), VIX 0.762 (23.87, declining from 26+), Credit 0.548 (HYG stabilizing), DXY 0.395 (dollar firm on safe-haven flows), TLT 0.530 (bonds range-bound), Liquidity 0.545. The VIX decline is the key regime shift signal — from 1.000 to 0.762 in one week. If VIX drops below 20 and S&P breaks above 200-day MA, regime shifts to Neutral. Strategy weights: Momentum 40%, Pullback 35%, Breakout 25%.
Early Risk-Off is a transitional regime — conditions are deteriorating but haven’t reached full defensive mode. The VIX declining from 26 to 24 signals that the worst of the panic may be behind us, but elevated levels above 20 keep us cautious. We blend Momentum plays (defense, gold — sectors with tailwinds) with Pullback entries (quality names that got dragged down) and selective Breakouts (tech with AI catalysts). This mix captures both the defensive posture and the recovery potential.
General Dynamics is the purest play on the Iran war escalation cycle. With the Pentagon accelerating defense spending and Trump promising to hit Iran “extremely hard” for 2–3 more weeks, GD’s Gulfstream and combat systems divisions are direct beneficiaries. The stock has a beta of only 0.40, providing portfolio stability. Trading at $349 with a 52-week high of $370, GD has room to run. The Citigroup $380 target and Wolfe Research $415 Outperform rating confirm institutional conviction. Q4 2025 EPS of $4.17 beat estimates, and FY2026 guidance of $16.10–$16.20 provides earnings visibility. The 1.67% dividend yield adds income while you wait.
Raytheon is the missile maker of the Iran war. Every Patriot, Tomahawk, and NASAMS intercept translates directly into replenishment orders. With Iran firing 20+ missiles at Israel and Gulf states, and the US planning further strikes, RTX’s order book is expanding in real-time. The Pratt & Whitney engine division benefits from increased military flight hours. RTX trades at a reasonable forward P/E for defense, with substantial earnings upside from the conflict cycle. The stock held firmly during the April 2 selloff (+1.8%) while the broad market dropped — classic relative strength in a risk-off environment.
Eli Lilly remains the premier defensive growth story in 2026. The GLP-1 franchise (Mounjaro/Zepbound) continues to dominate the obesity treatment market with $5B+ quarterly revenue run rate. In a risk-off environment, healthcare is the classic rotation destination — non-cyclical earnings, massive total addressable market, and pipeline optionality. LLY pulled back from $1,000+ to $935, creating a better entry. The stock has institutional sponsorship from every major fund. Q1 2026 earnings due late April should confirm the growth trajectory. With S&P 500 EPS growth at 13%, LLY is growing 3x faster.
Procter & Gamble is down 14.7% over the past year and 10.4% over the past month — a rare deep pullback for the world’s premier consumer staples company. The DCF analysis suggests PG is undervalued by 29.8% at current levels. This is a textbook risk-off pullback entry: the business is not broken (Tide, Pampers, Gillette are recession-proof brands), but the stock got caught in broad market selling. Q3 2026 earnings on April 24 is the catalyst for re-rating. The 2.2% dividend yield provides downside protection while you wait for the recovery. PG Q3 earnings could be the inflection point.
Amgen is a biotech blue-chip with defensive characteristics — recurring revenue from blockbuster drugs (Repatha, Otezla, Enbrel biosimilar), a 3%+ dividend yield, and low correlation to the macro cycle. The stock held relatively firm during the April 2 selloff (-0.3% vs market -1.22%), confirming its safe-haven status. AMGN’s MariTide GLP-1 candidate is a potential $10B+ opportunity competing with LLY and NVO. Pullback from $380+ to $348 creates a favorable risk/reward with the 50-day MA providing technical support. Healthcare rotation in risk-off environments historically outperforms by 200–400bp.
Micron is the most explosive setup in this scan. With Zacks Rank #1 (Strong Buy), A-grade Momentum Score, and 604% projected EPS growth, MU is the AI memory play that Wall Street is piling into. HBM (High Bandwidth Memory) demand from NVIDIA, AMD, and hyperscaler data centers is driving record revenue. Forward P/E of just 5.79 makes MU arguably the cheapest AI stock in the market. Semis were the top industry on April 2 (+4%), and Micron is leading the charge. The breakout above $85 resistance on volume confirms the bullish structure. Q1 FY2027 revenue estimated at $2.4B with record FY2026 results already in the bag.
SAP continues to be the strongest European tech play, delivering consistent cloud revenue growth as enterprises migrate to S/4HANA. The stock survived the April 2 selloff with a positive close (+0.9%), demonstrating exceptional relative strength. SAP has outperformed the DAX, CAC 40, and most European peers in 2026 thanks to its SaaS transition. The Iran war creates supply chain complexity that actually benefits ERP software providers — companies need better planning tools when logistics are disrupted. With the Hormuz blockade rerouting global shipping, enterprise software demand accelerates. SAP’s recurring revenue model provides earnings visibility that growth investors love in uncertain markets.
ASML is a monopoly — the only company on Earth that makes EUV lithography machines for cutting-edge chip manufacturing. Every TSMC, Samsung, and Intel fab needs ASML equipment. The stock pulled back from $750+ to $682, creating a rare pullback entry on an irreplaceable business. The AI capex cycle requires more advanced chips, which requires more EUV machines. ASML’s 2026 order book is full, with lead times stretching into 2027. The pullback is macro-driven (Iran war, risk-off rotation), not fundamental. Q1 2026 earnings in late April should confirm strong demand. The 1,110% gain in Lumentum (LITE, optical/AI hardware) shows the AI supply chain is repricing higher.
KOSPI crashed -3.9% on April 2 on Iran war escalation fears — the worst single-day drop in Asia. This creates a contrarian pullback opportunity. South Korea’s economy is export-driven (Samsung, SK Hynix, Hyundai, POSCO) and benefits directly from the AI semiconductor cycle. SK Hynix is the #2 HBM maker behind Micron, giving EWY direct AI exposure. The war selloff is overdone for Korea — it’s not a Gulf state and has minimal direct exposure to the Iran conflict. Historical patterns show Asian markets typically recover fully within 3 weeks after geopolitical shocks. The won weakness makes Korean exports more competitive. This is a mean-reversion play on panic selling.
Gold hit a record $4,800 intraday before pulling back to $4,694 — and the structural bid remains massive. The war premium, central bank buying (China, India, Turkey), inflation hedging (March CPI expected to show energy-driven spike), and US dollar uncertainty all converge into a perfect gold storm. The pullback from $4,800 to $4,694 is healthy profit-taking, not a trend reversal. GLD is the most liquid gold ETF with $75B+ AUM. JPMorgan targets $5,000 gold by Q3 2026 on continued geopolitical premium. The CPI release later this week could provide the next leg up if energy inflation comes in hot. Former Iranian FM Zarif’s ceasefire proposal was rejected — the war continues, and so does the gold bid.
| Ticker | Company | Score | Strategy | Entry | Stop | TP1 | R/R | Geo |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GD | General Dynamics | 93 | Momentum | $345–$350 | $330 | $365 | 1:3.0 | 🇺🇸 US |
| RTX | Raytheon Technologies | 91 | Momentum | $136–$140 | $131 | $148 | 1:1.7 | 🇺🇸 US |
| LLY | Eli Lilly | 92 | Momentum | $925–$940 | $900 | $980 | 1:1.7 | 🇺🇸 US |
| PG | Procter & Gamble | 88 | Pullback | $141–$144 | $135 | $150 | 1:1.5 | 🇺🇸 US |
| AMGN | Amgen | 89 | Pullback | $344–$350 | $330 | $365 | 1:1.5 | 🇺🇸 US |
| MU | Micron Technology | 90 | Breakout | $86–$90 | $82 | $97 | 1:2.3 | 🇺🇸 US |
| SAP | SAP SE | 91 | Momentum | $265–$270 | $255 | $285 | 1:2.3 | 🇪🇺 EU |
| ASML | ASML Holding | 89 | Pullback | $675–$690 | $650 | $720 | 1:1.6 | 🇪🇺 EU |
| EWY | South Korea ETF | 88 | Pullback | $55–$57 | $53 | $60 | 1:2.0 | 🌏 Asia |
| GLD | SPDR Gold Shares | 92 | Momentum | $425–$435 | $415 | $450 | 1:2.0 | 📊 ETF |
The DailyTickers scanner has published 23 scans since February 15, 2026, generating a cumulative return of +4.33% with a profit factor of 1.40. The 42% win rate is compensated by favorable R/R ratios averaging 1.96:1. Performance metrics include mark-to-market on 24 open positions. The war-driven volatility has created both opportunities (energy, defense, gold) and challenges (whipsaw stops on tech). We continue to widen stops to 1.2x ATR per retrospective feedback. Full portfolio simulation and equity curve available at Scanner Status Page.
We analyze 6 components — SPX breadth, VIX level & direction, credit spreads (HYG), US Dollar Index (DXY), Treasury bonds (TLT), and market liquidity — to classify the current regime. Each component is scored 0–1, and the weighted average determines the regime: Risk-On (<0.35), Neutral (0.35–0.50), Early Risk-Off (0.50–0.65), Risk-Off (0.65–0.80), Recovery (dynamic). Today’s score of 0.518 places us in Early Risk-Off — improving from last week’s 0.423 (Risk-Off).
Three complementary screeners run in parallel: Oversold bounce (RSI14 < 35, volume > 1.5x SMA20), Momentum expansion (close > SMA20, volume > 2x SMA20, RSI 50–75), and Breakout squeeze (close > SMA50, ATR14 > 1.2x ATR28). Additional screens cover EU, APAC, and ETF universes. Only 4 strategies are labeled: Momentum, Breakout, Pullback, Pre-Squeeze. Short Squeeze is excluded per policy.
Each candidate is scored on 4 equally-weighted factors: Technical (RSI, moving averages, volume, pattern recognition), Fundamental (earnings growth, valuation, margins), Sentiment (social sentiment, capital flows, insider transactions), and Risk/Reward (R/R ratio, stop distance, conviction). Scores range from 0–100; only setups scoring ≥85 are retained. Insider buying adds +5 pts; selling deducts -5 pts. Dilution risk is a disqualifying factor regardless of score.
To qualify as A+, a setup must have: (1) Score ≥85, (2) ≥3 confluence signals aligned, (3) identifiable catalyst within 10 trading days, (4) R/R ≥1.5:1, (5) sufficient liquidity (>$10M daily volume for stocks, >$50M for ETFs), (6) no active dilution risk (SEC S-3, warrants, ATM offerings), and (7) not already in open positions. Diversification targets: min 5 US + 2 EU + 1 APAC + 2 ETFs.
Final validation includes anti-dilution filters (SEC filing checks), insider transaction analysis, anti-doublon position checks, and 70% novelty requirement vs. previous scan. Stops are set at 1.2x ATR (widened per retrospective feedback). The 10 setups are ranked by composite score and presented with full transparency on entry, stop, targets, confirmations, and invalidations.
This is not financial advice. DailyTickers provides algorithmic analysis and educational content for informational purposes only. The scanner identifies potential setups based on technical, fundamental, and sentiment analysis, but past performance does not guarantee future results. All investments carry risk of loss. The Iran war creates exceptional volatility — position sizes should be reduced accordingly. Always do your own due diligence before making investment decisions. DailyTickers is not a registered investment advisor. Data sourced from Yahoo Finance, DailyTickers Gateway, and public sources — accuracy is not guaranteed.
Scanner published Friday, April 3, 2026, 21:00 UTC for Monday, April 6, 2026 session. Next scan: Monday evening for Tuesday, April 7. Tracking and performance updates via Scanner Status Page.