Category: EUR

  • NY Session Tactical Brief – Monday, 4 May

    Regime: Risk-off, with escalating Middle East tensions driving haven demand and weighing on equities; VIX at 16.89.

    Today’s market themes:

    • Geopolitical risk: Oil spike and risk-off sentiment due to heightened tensions in the Strait of Hormuz.
    • USD strength: Continued consolidation after recent gains, influenced by yield differentials and risk aversion.
    • ECB policy divergence: ECB hints at rate hikes clash with dovish undertones from BoJ and others.

    The setup: The spike in oil prices driven by Mideast tensions is fueling inflation fears and pressuring risk assets. Traders are pricing in a potential hawkish response from central banks, particularly the ECB, exacerbating the downside pressure on equities. Watch for further escalation in the Middle East, with a risk of a deeper equity sell-off if oil breaches $105 and 10Y yields rise further.

    Watch list (native time per event):

    • 15:30 ET CAD: BOC Gov Macklem Speaks

    Bias by asset:

    • DXY:
      • Direction: Neutral to bullish
      • Domestic (US): Fed on hold / Yield consolidation
      • Cross: Safe-haven flows / Global risk aversion
      • Levels: Support 118.50 / Resistance 119.00
    • EUR/USD:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (EU): ECB rate hike expectation / slow growth
      • Cross: DXY strength / Risk-off flows
      • Levels: 1.1650 / 1.1750
    • GBP/USD (Cable):
      • Direction: Neutral to bearish
      • Domestic (UK): BoE cautious / Data dependent
      • Cross: DXY strength / risk aversion
      • Levels: 1.3550 / 1.3650
    • USD/JPY:
      • Direction: Bullish, but with intervention risk
      • Domestic (JP): BoJ dovish / Yield curve control
      • Cross: US 10Y strength / Risk-off buying USD
      • Levels: 157.00 / 158.00
    • USD/CAD (Loonie):
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (CA): BoC cautious / WTI boost limited
      • Cross: DXY strength / US growth advantage
      • Levels: 1.3650 / 1.3700
    • AUD/USD (Aussie):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (AU): RBA dovish / Rate cut odds rise
      • Cross: DXY strength / China weakness / Risk-off
      • Levels: 0.7150 / 0.7250
    • NZD/USD (Kiwi):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (NZ): RBNZ dovish stance continues
      • Cross: DXY strength / Risk aversion
      • Levels: 0.5850 / 0.5950
    • USD/CHF (Swissy):
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (CH): SNB easing / Yield disadvantage
      • Cross: Safe-haven unwind / DXY strength
      • Levels: 0.7800 / 0.7850
    • EUR/GBP, EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY:
      • Direction (per cross): Neutral, Neutral, Bullish
      • Domestic: Relative CB stance + yields
      • Cross: DXY / Risk / cross-of-crosses dynamics
      • Levels: 0.8500-0.8600 / 170.00-171.00 / 192.00-193.00
    • XAU (Gold):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Rising real yields / Reduced haven demand
      • Cross: DXY strength / Risk-off waning
      • Levels: 4500 / 4550
    • XAG (Silver):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Industrial demand lackluster
      • Cross: DXY strength / Risk-off waning
      • Levels: Lower toward 47
    • WTI / Brent:
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Hormuz disruption / OPEC restraint
      • Cross: DXY influence / Risk regime
      • Levels: 100 / 105
    • Copper:
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (asset-specific): China stimulus needs affirmation
      • Cross: Global growth proxy / DXY
      • Levels: $5.00 / $5.10
    • SPX:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (US): Earnings worries / Fed on hold / Rising yields
      • Cross: VIX spike / Geopolitical tension
      • Levels: 5100 / 5150
    • NDX:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (US): Real yields / Mega-cap scrutiny
      • Cross: Rate sensitivity / VIX
      • Levels: 18250 / 18400
    • US30 (Dow):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (US): Cyclical concerns / Bond sell-off
      • Cross: Bond-yield impact
      • Levels: 38500 / 39000
    • UK100 (FTSE):
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (UK): Sterling level / Gilt impact
      • Cross: Global risk / US tone
      • Levels: 10300 / 10400
    • DAX:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (DE): Bund pressure / EU outlook dimmed
      • Cross: US tech spillover / DXY
      • Levels: 23800 / 24200
    • Nikkei:
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (JP): JPY rebound limiting gains
      • Cross: US tech / Risk regime
      • Levels: 59000 / 60000
    • BTC:
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (asset-specific): ETF flow stalling / Funding rate high
      • Cross: DXY impact / Risk regime
      • Levels: $79000 / $81000

    Positioning watch: Dollar, Aussie, Copper and Bitcoin are crowded longs and vulnerable to disappointment; Yen, Kiwi, and Nasdaq are crowded shorts and vulnerable to squeezes. Watch for correlated reversals if headlines shift.

    The pain trade: A de-escalation of Middle East tensions, combined with surprisingly dovish comments from Macklem at 15:30 ET, could trigger a rapid unwinding of oil longs and a short squeeze in risk assets, particularly Nasdaq.

  • Euro Bids Higher as ECB Rate Cut Bets Solidify – Monday, 4 May

    Where we are: EUR/USD is currently trading around 1.1705, having broken above the overnight high of 1.1695. The pair held a tight range overnight, finding support near 1.1670. This level is just above the prior NY close of 1.1665, with the break above suggesting building bullish momentum heading into the New York open.

    What’s driving it: The Euro is catching a bid as market participants are increasingly pricing in a June rate cut by the ECB. ECB speakers are walking a fine line, but the recent 25bp cut at the April 17th meeting, combined with the mild easing bias, keeps the pressure on. While Kazimir is pushing back against this narrative, suggesting a June rate hike is “all but inevitable,” the market is clearly leaning the other way, especially given the Eurozone HICP at 2% and Core HICP at 2.3%. We believe the market is pricing in a higher probability of continued easing as the data trajectory leans dovish.

    • The ECB’s Survey of Professional Forecasters for Q2 2026 showing that Euro-Zone inflation is seen as temporary supports the doves’ argument for further easing.
    • Speculator positioning in EUR is modestly long at +35,712 contracts, but this is at the 10th percentile over the last 52 weeks, suggesting squeeze risk is relatively low.
    • The rise in oil prices (WTI Crude at $99.89) could add to inflationary pressure, potentially staying the ECB’s hand.

    NY session focus: The 08:30 ET data dump will be crucial; watch for reactions in the US 2Y (currently 3.88%) and 10Y (4.4%) yields. A soft print would likely accelerate the Euro bid, targeting the 1.1750 level. A strong print would test the resolve of the ECB easing narrative, potentially pushing EUR/USD back towards 1.1650. The trade that’s working right now is fading hawkish ECB rhetoric and buying dips. The trade at risk is shorting EUR/USD ahead of potential upside surprises. The pain trade for EUR/USD is a hawkish repricing by the ECB, fueled by a significant re-acceleration in services inflation.

  • NY Session Tactical Brief – Friday, 1 May

    Regime: Mixed — VIX is elevated at 18.81, while US 10Y yields are up 6bp on the day, suggesting a grind higher driven by real-rate repricing.

    Today’s market themes:

    • Real-rate repricing: higher yields pressuring risk assets amid sticky inflation data
    • USD/JPY intervention risk: markets remain on high alert after suspected BOJ action yesterday
    • ISM Manufacturing: US data in focus to confirm or deny disinflation narrative

    The setup: With US 10Y yields at 4.42%, the market is testing the upper end of its recent range. The trade is to fade risk assets on rallies, especially tech, given the real-yield headwinds. The risk is a dovish surprise from ISM data, which could lead to a relief rally.

    Watch list (native time per event):

    • 10:00 ET USD: ISM Manufacturing PMI (forecast 53.1, prior 52.7)
    • 10:00 ET USD: ISM Manufacturing Prices (forecast 80.0, prior 78.3)

    Bias by asset:

    STRICT SILO RULE: For every non-USD asset, the Domestic line MUST contain only domestic content (home central bank / domestic data / domestic yield / domestic political-fiscal driver). USD, DXY, Fed, US yields, and risk regime go in the Cross line — never in Domestic. If no fresh domestic catalyst exists, write “No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response” in Domestic. For commodities, Domestic = real-yields / supply / inventories / flows. For BTC, Domestic = funding / ETF flow / on-chain.

    • DXY:
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (US): Strong US yields, data dependent Fed
      • Cross: Risk aversion, hawkish repricing
      • Levels: Resistance at 119.00, support at 118.50
    • EUR/USD:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (EU): ECB dovish pivot, sovereign risk
      • Cross: DXY strength, rising US-DE 10Y spread, risk-off flows
      • Levels: Resistance at 1.1750, support at 1.1700
    • GBP/USD (Cable):
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (UK): BoE relatively hawkish, but growth concerns linger
      • Cross: DXY strength offsets UK yield support
      • Levels: Resistance at 1.3650, support at 1.3580
    • USD/JPY:
      • Direction: Bullish, but cautious
      • Domestic (JP): BoJ still dovish, intervention risk limits upside
      • Cross: US 10Y strength trumps intervention fears
      • Levels: Resistance at 157.00, support at 156.00
    • USD/CAD (Loonie):
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (CA): BoC cautious, oil link provides limited support
      • Cross: DXY strength, widening US-CA 10Y yield differential
      • Levels: Resistance at 1.3650, support at 1.3580
    • AUD/USD (Aussie):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (AU): RBA hold weighs, commodity prices mixed
      • Cross: DXY strength, China growth concerns
      • Levels: Resistance at 0.6550, support at 0.6500
    • NZD/USD (Kiwi):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (NZ): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response
      • Cross: DXY strength, risk-off sentiment
      • Levels: Resistance at 0.5950, support at 0.5900
    • USD/CHF (Swissy):
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (CH): SNB easing supports USD/CHF
      • Cross: DXY strength, safe-haven flows
      • Levels: Resistance at 0.7850, support at 0.7750
    • EUR/GBP, EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY:
      • Direction (per cross): EUR/GBP: Neutral, EUR/JPY: Bullish, GBP/JPY: Bullish
      • Domestic: ECB dovish vs BoE hawkish, BoJ dovish drives JPY weakness
      • Cross: Risk-off hurts EUR/GBP, risk supports JPY crosses
      • Levels: EUR/GBP: 0.8550-0.8600, EUR/JPY: 170.00-171.00, GBP/JPY: 192.00-193.00
    • XAU (Gold):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Rising real yields undermine gold
      • Cross: DXY strength adds to downward pressure
      • Levels: Resistance at $4,620, support at $4,580
    • XAG (Silver):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Industrial demand stable, Gold-Silver ratio favoring Gold
      • Cross: DXY strength, risk-off sentiment
      • Levels: Resistance at $45, support at $44
    • WTI / Brent:
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Supply concerns offset by demand worries
      • Cross: DXY strength, risk-off sentiment
      • Levels: WTI: Resistance at $106, support at $104
    • Copper:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): China growth uncertain, LME stocks rising
      • Cross: DXY strength, global growth slowdown
      • Levels: Resistance at $4.50, support at $4.40
    • SPX:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (US): Rising yields pressure valuations
      • Cross: Elevated VIX, global uncertainty
      • Levels: Futures level 5,290, cash support 5,250, resistance 5,320
    • NDX:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (US): Real yield impact on valuations, earnings priced in
      • Cross: Rates sensitivity, VIX spike
      • Levels: Resistance at 18,100, support at 18,000
    • US30 (Dow):
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (US): Industrial and financial earnings mixed
      • Cross: Bond-yield sensitive, could lag
      • Levels: Resistance at 38,900, support at 38,700
    • UK100 (FTSE):
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (UK): Sterling weakness cushions downside
      • Cross: Global risk-off, US negative lead
      • Levels: Resistance at 10,350, support at 10,300
    • DAX:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (DE): Bund yields up, EU growth concerns
      • Cross: US tech weakness, DXY strength
      • Levels: Resistance at 24,500, support at 24,300
    • Nikkei:
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (JP): JPY strength weighs, BOJ stance limits upside
      • Cross: US tech direction, risk sentiment
      • Levels: Resistance at 59,600, support at 59,300
    • BTC:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Funding rates high, ETF inflows slowing
      • Cross: DXY strength, risk-off sentiment, Nasdaq correlation
      • Levels: Resistance at $61,500, support at $60,000

    Positioning watch: USD, AUD, Copper, and Bitcoin are all crowded longs above the 80th percentile, indicating significant squeeze risk on any negative surprises. JPY and NZD remain crowded shorts, susceptible to a squeeze if data improves or the BOJ hints at tightening.

    The pain trade: A soft ISM print would trigger a relief rally in risk assets, squeezing crowded USD longs and benefiting JPY/NZD shorts.

  • Euro Set to Test 1.1750 on ECB Hold – Friday, 1 May

    Where we are: EUR/USD is trading around 1.1715, drifting sideways in early European trade. Overnight, the pair ranged between 1.1690 and 1.1725. This level is slightly above yesterday’s New York close near 1.1705, however, price action has struggled to build momentum so far this morning.

    What’s driving it: The Euro is holding steady after the ECB’s latest monetary policy decision on Thursday, where they cut rates by 25bp to 2.50% but retained a meeting-by-meeting approach. The central bank acknowledged heightened inflation risks but also noted growth concerns. There’s no fresh domestic catalyst today; traders are looking ahead to the June meeting, with data-dependent doves eyeing the wage tracker softening and services HICP near 3% as support for a follow-up cut.

    • Lagarde’s press conference confirmed the unanimous decision to hold rates steady, though a hike was discussed.
    • Hawkish ECB official Nagel cautioned the central bank might need to tighten policy as early as June, citing a worsening inflation outlook.
    • Speculator positioning in EUR is modestly long at +41,324 contracts, near the 10th percentile, reducing squeeze risk relative to shorted peers (JPY, GBP).

    NY session focus: All eyes on the 10:00 ET ISM Manufacturing PMI and ISM Manufacturing Prices data. A strong print above 53.1 could reignite USD strength, pushing EUR/USD back towards 1.1650, while a weaker reading could see a test of the 1.1750 level, and potentially 1.1775. The trade that is working is fading intraday rallies. The trade that is at risk is chasing the breakout beyond 1.1750. The pain trade is a surprisingly weak ISM print forcing a short squeeze above 1.1800.

  • NY Session Tactical Brief – Thursday, 30 April

    Regime: Risk-on, fueled by dovish central bank pivots and a weaker DXY (98.33), as global yields decline.

    Today’s market themes:

    • Dovish repricing of global central bank outlooks, with focus on BoE and ECB.
    • USD weakness amplified by potential intervention risks in USD/JPY, testing multi-decade highs.
    • Geopolitical tensions (US-Iran) continue to underpin commodities volatility.

    The setup: Markets are positioned for lower rates globally, but BoE and ECB decisions are crucial. The trade is to fade USD strength on any hawkish surprises. Risks include stronger US data or escalation of geopolitical tensions. US 10Y at 4.389% and DXY at 98.33 are key levels.

    Watch list (native time per event):

    • 08:30 ET CAD: GDP m/m (forecast 0.2%, prior 0.1%)
    • 12:00 BST GBP: BoE Monetary Policy Report
    • 14:15 CET EUR: Main Refinancing Rate (forecast 2.15%, prior 2.15%)

    Bias by asset:

    • DXY:
      • Direction: Down
      • Domestic (US): Fed on hold, focusing on inflation; data-dependent bias.
      • Cross: Dovish global CB pivots weighing; intervention watch impacting.
      • Levels: Support at 98.00, resistance at 98.75.
    • EUR/USD:
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (EU): ECB likely dovish, but watchful of inflation and fragmentation.
      • Cross: Weaker DXY, supporting; focus on US-DE 10Y spread widening.
      • Levels: Support at 1.1650, resistance at 1.1720.
    • GBP/USD (Cable):
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (UK): BoE holds steady; focus on inflation persistence.
      • Cross: DXY softness helps; US-UK 10Y spread still favoring USD.
      • Levels: Support at 1.3450, resistance at 1.3550.
    • USD/JPY:
      • Direction: Down
      • Domestic (JP): Intervention risk elevated; BoJ still dovish.
      • Cross: US 10Y dropping; risk aversion flows boosting JPY.
      • Levels: Support at 155.50, resistance at 157.50.
    • USD/CAD (Loonie):
      • Direction: Down
      • Domestic (CA): GDP key; BoC cautious; commodity support.
      • Cross: Weaker DXY; US-CA 10Y spread compression.
      • Levels: Support at 1.3645, resistance at 1.3700.
    • AUD/USD (Aussie):
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (AU): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response.
      • Cross: DXY weakness; Copper prices boosting; China growth hopes.
      • Levels: Support at 0.7100, resistance at 0.7170.
    • NZD/USD (Kiwi):
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (NZ): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response.
      • Cross: DXY weakness; risk-on sentiment supporting; squeezed shorts.
      • Levels: Support at 0.5820, resistance at 0.5880.
    • USD/CHF (Swissy):
      • Direction: Down
      • Domestic (CH): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response.
      • Cross: DXY drop; safe-haven demand waning; yields declining.
      • Levels: Support at 0.7830, resistance at 0.7900.
    • EUR/GBP, EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY:
      • Direction (per cross): EUR/GBP: Neutral; EUR/JPY: Down; GBP/JPY: Down.
      • Domestic: See individual currency biases for CB divergence.
      • Cross: DXY influence; risk appetite dictating flows.
      • Levels: Watch key support/resistance on the individual crosses.
    • XAU (Gold):
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Real yields still supportive; geopolitical bids strong.
      • Cross: Weaker DXY; safe-haven demand persisting.
      • Levels: Support at 4550, resistance at 4660.
    • XAG (Silver):
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Industrial demand increasing; Gold-Silver ratio still elevated.
      • Cross: DXY weakness; risk-on tone helping.
      • Levels: Support at 7150, resistance at 7450.
    • WTI / Brent:
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Supply concerns remain; EIA inventories in focus.
      • Cross: DXY influence; geopolitical risk premium embedded.
      • Levels: WTI support at 103.00, resistance at 106.00.
    • Copper:
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (asset-specific): China growth hopes remain; LME stocks watched.
      • Cross: Global growth proxy; DXY weakness aiding.
      • Levels: Support at 590, resistance at 605.
    • SPX:
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (US): Earnings positive; Fed on hold supporting.
      • Cross: VIX subdued; global risk appetite constructive.
      • Levels: Futures support at 7130, resistance at 7220.
    • NDX:
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (US): Mega-cap earnings driving gains; real yields remain low.
      • Cross: Rates sensitivity still relevant; VIX relatively calm.
      • Levels: Support at 27200, resistance at 27700.
    • US30 (Dow):
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (US): Cyclical earnings holding up; financial sector performing.
      • Cross: Bond-yield reaction contained; risk-on flowing through.
      • Levels: Support at 48700, resistance at 49500.
    • UK100 (FTSE):
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (UK): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response.
      • Cross: Global risk appetite boosting; US tone constructive.
      • Levels: Support at 22100, resistance at 22500.
    • DAX:
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (DE): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response.
      • Cross: US tech strength helpful; DXY weighing less; risk regime strong.
      • Levels: Support at 23700, resistance at 24200.
    • Nikkei:
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (JP): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response.
      • Cross: US tech providing support; risk appetite generally good.
      • Levels: Support at 58900, resistance at 59500.
    • BTC:
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (asset-specific): ETF flows stable; funding rates watched.
      • Cross: DXY weakness supporting; Nasdaq correlation remains intact.
      • Levels: Support at 75000, resistance at 77000.

    Positioning watch: JPY remains the most crowded short (0%ile), making it vulnerable to a squeeze on any hawkish BoJ surprise or intervention. Copper, AUD and Bitcoin also hold crowded long positions (>80th percentile), making them vulnerable to sharp selloffs on weaker China data, stronger DXY or a risk-off event.

    The pain trade: A hawkish BoE or ECB surprise would trigger a violent short squeeze in USD/JPY and a broader risk-off move, hammering crowded longs in AUD, Copper and Bitcoin.

  • Euro Bounces, Primed for ECB Rate Decision – Thursday, 30 April

    Where we are: EUR/USD currently trades at 1.1694, up 0.15% on the session and bouncing from an overnight low of 1.1656. The pair is testing the upper end of its intraday range (1.1656-1.1719), with the prior NY close representing initial resistance. A sustained break above 1.1719 would open the door to further gains.

    What’s driving it: The Euro is finding some support ahead of today’s ECB announcements, though the overall tone remains cautious. The central bank, following its recent 25bp cut on April 17th, is widely expected to hold steady today, keeping the deposit facility rate at 2.50%. German GDP data and Eurozone CPI prints due this morning will set the stage for the ECB’s policy statement and press conference later today. The softer bund yields, with the DE 2Y down 10bp to 2.645%, reflects market expectations of continued mild easing bias from the ECB.

    • ECB cut 25bp on 2026-04-17, retaining meeting-by-meeting language.
    • Eurozone CPI Flash Estimate expected to rise to 3.0% y/y (prior 2.5%).
    • CFTC data shows net non-commercial Euro positioning at +41,324 contracts, modestly long but only at the 10th percentile, leaving room for a squeeze if the ECB surprises hawkishly.

    NY session focus: All eyes are on the ECB’s Main Refinancing Rate announcement at 14:15 CET and the subsequent press conference at 14:45 CET. Focus will be on any hints regarding the timing and magnitude of future rate cuts. A hawkish tilt could see EUR/USD test 1.1750, while a dovish stance could lead to a retest of the 1.1650 level. Ahead of that, the 08:30 ET US Advance GDP and Core PCE prints will provide competing data for the pair. The pain trade for the Euro is a hawkish ECB struggling to contain upside surprises in the US data and an Iran war continuing to stoke supply risks.

  • NY Session Tactical Brief – Wednesday, 29 April

    Regime: Mixed, as lower European equity indices and higher Brent prices offset positive sentiment from Bitcoin and US tech futures; VIX at 18.02.

    Today’s market themes:

    • BoC policy decision and press conference: Expect hawkish guidance from Macklem as inflation remains stubbornly high.
    • Hormuz Strait disruption fears support Oil: Geopolitical risks weigh as Brent hits one-month highs near $109/bbl.
    • USD awaits Fed decision: Dollar consolidating gains ahead of anticipated steady rates.

    The setup: Oil supply fears are currently the dominant driver, pushing Brent to $109. Focus now shifts to how the Fed will address these commodity price pressures at its upcoming meeting, particularly given continued indications that USD is “crowded long”. Rate decision + Powell presser could spur volatility. Watch for a DXY breakout if Powell speaks hawkishly or a sharp reversal if the Fed pivots dovishly on the recent inflation data.

    Watch list (native time per event):

    • 11:30 AEST AUD CPI m/m (forecast 1.3%, prior 0.0%)
    • 09:45 ET CAD BOC Rate Statement (forecast 2.25%, prior 2.25%)
    • 14:00 ET USD Federal Funds Rate (forecast 3.75%, prior 3.75%)

    Bias by asset:

    • DXY:
      • Direction: Neutral, awaiting Fed guidance.
      • Domestic (US): Fed policy decision, US data releases, US yield curve.
      • Cross: Risk sentiment, FX cross flows ahead of tech earnings.
      • Levels: Support 98.40, resistance 98.80.
    • EUR/USD:
      • Direction: Bearish, pressured by DXY strength.
      • Domestic (EU): Sticky Spanish inflation / peripheral spreads.
      • Cross: DXY strength, US-DE 10Y spread favoring USD, risk aversion.
      • Levels: Support 1.1690, resistance 1.1730.
    • GBP/USD (Cable):
      • Direction: Neutral.
      • Domestic (UK): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response.
      • Cross: DXY strength, US-UK 10Y spread, risk-off flows.
      • Levels: Support 1.3490, resistance 1.3530.
    • USD/JPY:
      • Direction: Bullish, eyeing 160.
      • Domestic (JP): BoJ dovishness, intervention risk, JGB yields.
      • Cross: Rising US 10Y yield, DXY strength, risk-on flows.
      • Levels: Support 159.50, resistance 160.00.
    • USD/CAD (Loonie):
      • Direction: Neutral.
      • Domestic (CA): Hawkish BoC needed to push higher.
      • Cross: DXY strength, US-CA 10Y spread.
      • Levels: Support 1.3670, resistance 1.3700.
    • AUD/USD (Aussie):
      • Direction: Bearish, after mixed CPI data.
      • Domestic (AU): Mixed CPI response, RBA watch.
      • Cross: DXY strength, US-AU 10Y spread, China growth concerns.
      • Levels: Support 0.7150, resistance 0.7200.
    • NZD/USD (Kiwi):
      • Direction: Bearish, pressed by the RBNZ’s easing bias.
      • Domestic (NZ): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response.
      • Cross: DXY strength, US-NZ 10Y spread, risk-off flows.
      • Levels: Support 0.5850, resistance 0.5900.
    • USD/CHF (Swissy):
      • Direction: Bullish, supported by the SNB’s easing bias.
      • Domestic (CH): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response.
      • Cross: DXY strength, safe-haven outflows from CHF.
      • Levels: Support 0.7880, resistance 0.7910.
    • EUR/GBP, EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY:
      • Direction (per cross): Neutral.
      • Domestic: Relative BoE and ECB stance, relative yields.
      • Cross: DXY strength, risk sentiment.
      • Levels: Monitor key support and resistance.
    • XAU (Gold):
      • Direction: Bearish, pressured by real yields.
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Rising real yields pressuring gold.
      • Cross: DXY strength, risk aversion.
      • Levels: Support 4550, resistance 4630.
    • XAG (Silver):
      • Direction: Bearish, impacted by industrial demand.
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Demand mixed and impacted by real yields.
      • Cross: DXY strength, risk aversion.
      • Levels: Support 7180, resistance 7380.
    • WTI / Brent:
      • Direction: Bullish, supply disruption fears.
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Geopolitical factors driving surge.
      • Cross: Weaker DXY could add fuel to rally, risk on.
      • Levels: WTI support 100.00, Brent support 105.00.
    • Copper:
      • Direction: Neutral, but China key.
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Eyes on China growth, LME stock levels.
      • Cross: Global growth sentiment.
      • Levels: Support 595, resistance 603.
    • SPX:
      • Direction: Sideways, waiting on Fed and earnings.
      • Domestic (US): Eyes on earnings and Fed stance.
      • Cross: VIX regime, global macro.
      • Levels: Futures support 7160, resistance 7190.
    • NDX:
      • Direction: Neutral, focused on mega-cap earnings.
      • Domestic (US): Earnings and AI optimism.
      • Cross: Rates sensitive, watching VIX.
      • Levels: Support 27190, resistance 27320.
    • US30 (Dow):
      • Direction: Neutral, industrials in focus.
      • Domestic (US): Earnings focus and overall US data.
      • Cross: Bond yield reaction.
      • Levels: Support 49200, resistance 49420.
    • UK100 (FTSE):
      • Direction: Bearish, underperforming on Sterling strength.
      • Domestic (UK): Sterling and Gilt yields.
      • Cross: Global sentiment.
      • Levels: Support 22280, resistance 22450.
    • DAX:
      • Direction: Bearish, dragged by German yields.
      • Domestic (DE): German yields and data.
      • Cross: US tech and risk.
      • Levels: Support 23900, resistance 24100.
    • Nikkei:
      • Direction: Bearish, after BoJ inaction.
      • Domestic (JP): JPY levels and JGB yields.
      • Cross: US tech, risk.
      • Levels: Support 59700, resistance 60650.
    • BTC:
      • Direction: Bullish, trending higher.
      • Domestic (asset-specific): ETF flows supportive.
      • Cross: Risk-on environment.
      • Levels: Support 76000, resistance 78000.

    Positioning watch: USD and AUD are crowded longs, while JPY and NZD are crowded shorts. A dovish Fed surprise or positive Japanese data could trigger significant short squeezes in the JPY and NZD.

    The pain trade: A dovish hold from the Fed, coupled with commentary suggesting openness to rate cuts later this year, would trigger a sharp DXY sell-off and a rally in risk assets, catching crowded USD longs off guard.

  • Euro Under Pressure as Bund Yields Climb – Wednesday, 29 April

    Where we are: EUR/USD trades at 1.1697, down 0.15% on the day and near the bottom of its 1.1694-1.1721 intraday range. The Fiber continues to struggle below the 1.1700 handle, failing to capitalize on earlier European session attempts to rally. This comes after yesterday’s close near 1.1715, signaling a continuation of the recent bearish trend.

    What’s driving it: Euro weakness is being driven by a combination of factors, but the immediate pressure stems from rising German yields, particularly the Schatz (2Y) which is up 4bp to 2.690%. This yield move is happening in tandem with concerning regional CPI numbers, with Spanish inflation unexpectedly quickening beyond the ECB’s goal. Even with the most recent ECB cut of 25bp, markets are concerned further easing is less likely if inflation continues to accelerate. The mildly easing bias remains in place, but policymakers are clearly divided. DXY strength, currently at 98.61, is adding additional downside pressure on the Fiber.

    • The Spanish inflation print is at 3.5%, the highest since June 2024, creating doubt about ECB easing.
    • DE 2Y (Schatz) yields climbed to 2.690%, a 4bp increase on the day.
    • Speculator positioning in the Euro is modestly long at +41,324 contracts, sitting at the 10th percentile; this leaves significant room for further short positioning.

    NY session focus: Focus in the NY session shifts squarely to the FOMC decision at 14:00 ET and the subsequent press conference at 14:30 ET. Markets widely expect rates to remain unchanged at 3.75%, but any hawkish rhetoric could send the DXY higher and EUR/USD lower, potentially testing the 1.1650 level. Keep an eye on the US 2Y yield, currently at 3.879%, which is highly sensitive to Fed policy expectations. A break below 1.1690 could trigger a deeper sell-off towards 1.1600. The pain trade for EUR/USD would be a dovish surprise from the Fed, prompting a sharp rally back towards 1.1750.

  • NY Session Tactical Brief – Tuesday, 28 April

    Regime: Risk-off, as Nasdaq futures lead declines and gold tests three-week lows, driven by persistent inflation fears and higher front-end yields (US 2Y +3.5bp).

    Today’s market themes:

    • OPEC+ uncertainty: UAE exit sparks oil supply concerns, boosting crude prices.
    • BOJ disappointment: Yen weakens as BOJ holds policy, defying hawkish expectations.
    • Australian Inflation: RBA to watch closely.

    The setup: Market participants are repricing for potentially persistent inflation with focus on the Fed and data dependency. Rising yields and a stronger USD are weighing on risk assets. Front-end US yields are climbing, driving DXY higher (98.58) and pressuring equities. Watch for follow-through in NY session, especially tech given the Nasdaq’s underperformance.

    Watch list (native time per event):

    • 10:00 ET USD: CB Consumer Confidence (forecast 89.0, prior 91.8)
    • 11:30 AEST AUD: CPI y/y (forecast 4.8%, prior 3.7%)
    • 12:30 NZT NZD: RBNZ Gov Breman Speaks

    Bias by asset:

    • DXY:
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (US): Fed likely to maintain hawkish stance given sticky inflation.
      • Cross: Risk-off sentiment and rising yields support demand.
      • Levels: Resistance at 98.75, support at 98.25.
    • EUR/USD:
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (EU): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response.
      • Cross: DXY strength and widening US-DE 10Y spread pressure pair.
      • Levels: Resistance at 1.1725, support at 1.1675.
    • GBP/USD (Cable):
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (UK): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response.
      • Cross: DXY strength and widening US-UK 10Y spread weighs on Cable.
      • Levels: Resistance at 1.3540, support at 1.3460.
    • USD/JPY:
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (JP): BoJ holds steady, reinforcing dovish stance. Intervention risk remains.
      • Cross: US 10Y yield rise widens US-JP yield differential.
      • Levels: Resistance at 159.80, support at 158.95.
    • USD/CAD (Loonie):
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (CA): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response.
      • Cross: DXY strength and US-CA 10Y spread support pair.
      • Levels: Resistance at 1.3680, support at 1.3610.
    • AUD/USD (Aussie):
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (AU): CPI data likely to inform RBA stance on rates.
      • Cross: DXY strength, China growth concerns weigh.
      • Levels: Resistance at 0.7195, support at 0.7150.
    • NZD/USD (Kiwi):
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (NZ): RBNZ Gov Breman speaks; further easing priced in.
      • Cross: DXY strength and risk-off sentiment pressure Kiwi.
      • Levels: Resistance at 0.5920, support at 0.5865.
    • USD/CHF (Swissy):
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (CH): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response.
      • Cross: DXY strength and safe-haven unwinding support pair.
      • Levels: Resistance at 0.7910, support at 0.7850.
    • EUR/GBP, EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY:
      • Direction (per cross): EUR/GBP neutral, EUR/JPY bearish, GBP/JPY bearish.
      • Domestic: BoJ dovishness supports GBP/JPY.
      • Cross: DXY strength impacts all crosses; risk-off benefits JPY.
      • Levels: Watch key support/resistance levels.
    • XAU (Gold):
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Rising real yields weigh on gold.
      • Cross: DXY strength further pressures gold.
      • Levels: Resistance at 4600, support at 4565.
    • XAG (Silver):
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Industrial demand concerns add to pressure.
      • Cross: DXY strength and risk-off sentiment drag silver lower.
      • Levels: Resistance at 7250, support at 7200.
    • WTI / Brent:
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (asset-specific): UAE withdrawal from OPEC creates supply uncertainty.
      • Cross: Risk-off sentiment could limit upside despite supply concerns.
      • Levels: WTI resistance at $102, Brent resistance at $106.
    • Copper:
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (asset-specific): China growth concerns weigh on demand.
      • Cross: DXY strength adds to downward pressure.
      • Levels: Resistance at 600, support at 593.
    • SPX:
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (US): Rising yields and mixed earnings reports weigh.
      • Cross: VIX trending higher; risk-off mood dominates.
      • Levels: Futures resistance at 7225, cash support at 7145.
    • NDX:
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (US): Higher real yields and mixed earnings data weighs heavy.
      • Cross: Sensitive to increased rates and hawkish Fed stance.
      • Levels: Resistance at 27500, support at 27000.
    • US30 (Dow):
      • Direction: Neutral.
      • Domestic (US): No clear catalyst — sensitive to overall market tone.
      • Cross: Resilient reaction to bond-yield movement in last session.
      • Levels: Resistance at 49500, support at 49300.
    • UK100 (FTSE):
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (UK): Sterling weakness and global factors dominate.
      • Cross: Reacting sharply to global risk-off.
      • Levels: Resistance at 22500, support at 22400.
    • DAX:
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (DE): Cautious outlook from ECB surveys.
      • Cross: Risk-off and tech weakness weigh on DAX.
      • Levels: Resistance at 24150, support at 23900.
    • Nikkei:
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (JP): BoJ inaction pressures Nikkei.
      • Cross: Risk regime compounds effects on the downside.
      • Levels: Resistance at 60600, support at 59700.
    • BTC:
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Negative sentiment, ETF outflows.
      • Cross: Correlations with Nasdaq and risk assets weighing.
      • Levels: Resistance at 77500, support at 76000.

    Positioning watch: The crowded JPY short (0th percentile) is vulnerable to a squeeze on any surprise shift in BoJ policy or hawkish rhetoric. AUD and Bitcoin long positions (>85th percentile) are also at risk of a correction given the current risk-off environment.

    The pain trade: A dovish surprise from the Fed, reversing the yield spike and triggering a short squeeze in JPY, would inflict maximum pain on crowded short positions and boost risk assets.

  • Euro Under Pressure as Rate Cut Bets Persist – Tuesday, 28 April

    Where we are: EUR/USD trades at 1.1692, down 0.26% on the day, after a volatile overnight session between 1.1678 and 1.1727. The Fiber is struggling to hold above intraday lows and is testing the lower end of its recent range. A break below 1.1678 would expose the 1.1650 level, while resistance remains up at 1.1727.

    What’s driving it: The mildly dovish tilt from the ECB continues to weigh on the Euro. Despite holding steady this month, last week’s 25bp cut to 2.50% and the commitment to a meeting-by-meeting approach leave the door open for further easing in June. Disappointing Eurozone economic data continues to build the dovish case, with the ECB’s own survey pointing to tighter lending conditions. Downside pressure has been exacerbated by a stronger dollar, with the DXY currently at 98.58, and rising US yields.

    • The ECB Consumer Expectations Survey for March and April’s bank lending survey both highlighted tightening financial conditions in the Eurozone.
    • German 2-year Schatz yields are up 4bp to 2.629%, a relatively muted response that is failing to provide meaningful support to the Euro.
    • Speculative positioning remains modestly long at +41,324 contracts, but the rise of +15,306 contracts w/w indicates increased vulnerability to a downside surprise, especially if US data prints hot.

    NY session focus: All eyes are on the 10:00 ET release of US CB Consumer Confidence. A stronger-than-expected print could fuel further dollar strength and pressure EUR/USD towards 1.1650. Conversely, a weaker print could offer a temporary reprieve, potentially pushing the pair back towards 1.1727. The US-DE 10Y yield spread, currently at +129bp, continues to act as a major headwind for the Fiber. The trade that’s working is short EUR/USD on bounces. The pain trade is a weak US confidence number alongside dovish ECB comments triggering a short squeeze.

  • NY Session Tactical Brief – Monday, 27 April

    Today’s market themes:

    • Iran tensions easing: potential peace proposal buoying risk assets, weighing on oil.
    • BOJ hold: yen weakness continues post-policy announcement.
    • Crowded positioning: squeeze risk in USD, JPY, AUD, BTC, and Copper.

    The setup: The market is pricing in reduced geopolitical risk following reports of a potential peace proposal from Iran, triggering a risk-on move. Expect continued USD weakness and commodity pullback near-term. Watch for a breakout above 216.00 in GBP/JPY to confirm bullish momentum. US 10Y at 4.323%.

    Watch list (London time):

    • 13:30 [Medium] USD: CB Consumer Confidence (forecast 97.0, prior 98.7)
    • 15:00 [Low] US: Richmond Manufacturing Index (forecast -5, prior -11)
    • Any BOJ speaker comments regarding future policy adjustments.

    Bias by asset:

    • DXY: Down, risk-on sentiment and unwinding of crowded longs, target 97.80.
    • EUR: Up, weaker dollar and wider US-DE 10Y spread (+130bp), target 1.1800.
    • GBP: Up, risk-on and slightly narrower US-UK 10Y (-63bp), targeting 1.3600.
    • JPY: Down, BOJ inaction fuels yen weakness; US-JP 10Y at +185bp.
    • CAD: Up, weaker dollar, supported by WTI strength.
    • AUD: Up, driven by energy prices and weaker USD.
    • NZD: Up, benefiting from risk-on sentiment, supported by reports of easing tensions.
    • CHF: Down, weaker dollar as DXY falls and risk appetite returns.
    • EUR/GBP, EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY: Neutral, watching cross currents of risk and individual currency drivers.
    • XAU (Gold): Neutral, real yields stable but safe haven demand ebbing.
    • XAG (Silver): Neutral, trading lower with gold; keep an eye on the gold/silver ratio.
    • WTI / Brent: Mixed, Iran headlines offset bullish drivers; watch for $98 WTI break.
    • Copper: Down, concerns over China’s growth trajectory.
    • SPX: Up, supported by risk-on sentiment, targeting 7220.
    • NDX: Up, benefiting from lower rates and mega-cap momentum.
    • US30: Neutral, mixed picture; impacted by rising oil costs and potential peace.
    • UK100: Neutral, struggling due to strength in GBP and commodity sector drag.
    • DAX: Up, driven by easing tensions regarding Iran.
    • Nikkei: Up, technology sector strength and yen weakness persist.
    • BTC: Down, risk-off sentiment in crypto; crowded longs suggest downside risk.

    Positioning watch: CFTC data reveals crowded longs in USD, AUD, Copper, and Bitcoin, increasing squeeze risk on any negative news. JPY and NZD are crowded shorts, vulnerable to positive surprises.

    The pain trade: A surprise hawkish signal from a Fed speaker would crush risk assets, triggering a scramble to cover USD shorts and unwind equity longs.

  • Euro Attempts Recovery on DXY Weakness – Monday, 27 April

    Where we are: EUR/USD is currently trading at 1.1745, up 0.31% on the session, after printing a day range of 1.1705-1.1755. The pair has recouped some of last week’s losses, finding support near the 1.17 level. This bounce coincides with a broader weakening of the US Dollar, as the DXY trades down -0.29% to 98.14.

    What’s driving it: The primary driver is the broad USD weakness, reflected in the DXY decline. This appears linked to receding concerns about imminent aggressive Fed tightening, evidenced by the stability in US real yields. Simultaneously, the ECB’s survey pointing to a lack of second-round inflation effects has capped Euro upside, with the market factoring in a wait-and-see approach from the ECB on Thursday. The US-German 10-year yield spread sits at +130bp.

    • Reuters wire noting the ECB survey showed scant signs of second round inflation effects.
    • The FT reporting China warning the EU over the ‘Made in Europe’ law.
    • EUR net non-commercial positioning remains modestly long but at the 10th percentile, leaving room for further build.

    NY session focus: Expect volatility around the US data releases this morning, but the focus will quickly shift towards end-of-day flows. Watch for a break above 1.1755 to target 1.1800. Below, a retest of 1.1700 is likely. The EUR/USD trade continues to be dominated by swings in the DXY, making DXY levels critical indicators. The pain trade for EUR would be a resurgence in USD strength fueled by hawkish Fed commentary or geopolitical escalation.

  • NY Session Tactical Brief – Saturday, 25 April

    Today’s market themes:

    • Iran talks: Shifting expectations for US-Iran negotiations drives swings in oil and risk sentiment.
    • Dollar weakness: Broad USD selling pressure continues, impacting FX crosses and commodity prices.
    • Tech rebound: Nasdaq leading equities higher, fueled by a rotation back into growth and mega-cap stocks.

    The setup: Equities are bid into the NY open on hopes for Iran deal progress, weighing on crude and USD. Look for pullbacks in oil to be bought if Trump’s stance softens, and USD dip-buying at 98.15 DXY. US 10Y at 4.302% offers resistance.

    Watch list (London time):

    • 17:00 USD: President Trump Speaks (Medium)
    • No other scheduled events
    • No Central Bank Speakers

    Bias by asset:

    • DXY: Down – Iran talks pressure, target 98.00.
    • EUR: Up – Weak USD, US-DE 10Y spread +131bp supports.
    • GBP: Up – Sentiment improved, US-UK 10Y spread -61bp.
    • JPY: Down – Risk-on flows overshadow US-JP 10Y +187bp.
    • CAD: Up – Weaker USD and oil price sensitivity at 1.3650.
    • AUD: Up – Risk appetite lifts, eyeing 0.7200.
    • NZD: Up – Dollar weakness main driver, 0.5900 target.
    • CHF: Down – Risk-on offsets safe-haven demand; watch 0.7800.
    • EUR/GBP, EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY: Mixed – Play risk sentiment and individual drivers.
    • XAU (Gold): Up – Real yields falling, target 4775.
    • XAG (Silver): Up – Following Gold, watch Gold/Silver ratio.
    • WTI / Brent: Down – Iran talk hopes weighing, choppy around $94/$105.
    • Copper: Neutral – Modest China demand concerns; hold 600.
    • SPX: Up – Risk-on, 7250 potential on break of 7200.
    • NDX: Up – Rates ease, mega-caps lead, new highs possible.
    • US30: Neutral – Lagging tech, focus on economic data later in the week.
    • UK100: Down – Underperforming EU peers, still heavy tone.
    • DAX: Neutral – Holding steady, weak tech hampering.
    • Nikkei: Up – Catching up to US tech move, watch 60000.
    • BTC: Neutral – Consolidation near highs, risk-on/off correlation still relevant.

    Positioning watch: CFTC data shows crowded longs in USD, AUD, Copper, and Bitcoin, and crowded shorts in JPY and NZD — any hawkish comments from the Fed or negative trade news could trigger violent short squeezes in JPY/NZD.

    The pain trade: A complete breakdown of US-Iran talks and renewed Hormuz tensions would spike oil, send the dollar higher, and crush risk assets.

  • Euro Bounces as Dollar Weakens, Middle East Eases – Saturday, 25 April

    Where we are: EUR/USD is currently trading at 1.1719, up 0.28% on the session after a low of 1.1673. Overnight momentum pushed Fiber higher on a weaker dollar, testing intraday highs of 1.1721. The Euro is attempting to reclaim lost ground after trading at two-week lows earlier in the week, still holding below the prior NY close near 1.1750.

    What’s driving it: Dollar weakness is the primary driver, evidenced by the DXY falling to 98.36, down 0.31% as US yields compress. A partial unwind of geopolitical risk premia, tied to the US-Iran talks, is adding fuel to the fire. Speculator positioning in EUR is modestly long, at the 10th percentile, which means the squeeze potential on any sustained upside surprise is substantial.

    • Guardian Business: “California’s jet fuel supply drops to three-year low as Middle East turmoil squeezes global oil market,” suggesting a reversal of geopolitical tension releases upside pressure.
    • US 2Y yields are down 5.9bp to 3.785%, as the market prices in less hawkish Fed policy.
    • EUR net non-commercial positioning is only at the 10th percentile.

    NY session focus: Traders will be watching for follow-through on the dollar weakness, aiming for 1.1750 initially, then 1.1800 as the next key level. The US-German 10-year yield spread is currently at +131bp, with room to tighten in favor of the Euro, especially as European politicians like Macron posture toward greater continental military independence. Keep an eye on any headlines related to the US-Iran talks, as well as President Trump’s speech at 17:00 London time, which could introduce volatility. The pain trade here is a resurgence of geopolitical tensions driving a flight to safety and dollar strength, pushing EUR/USD back below 1.1700.

  • Asset Summary – Friday, 24 April

    Asset Summary – Friday, 24 April

    US DOLLAR experienced a mixed trading session, initially rising before retracing some gains. Optimism surrounding potential progress in US-Iran negotiations, indicated by reports of upcoming talks in Islamabad, and the extension of the ceasefire in Lebanon, weighed on the dollar. However, earlier in the week the dollar saw gains. The ongoing impasse in US-Iran relations and the vulnerability of the Strait of Hormuz are contributing to upward pressure on oil prices. This is fueling inflation concerns which are causing investors to re-evaluate the future path of interest rates. The Federal Reserve is expected to hold steady on interest rates in the upcoming meeting, with expectations of no further adjustments for the rest of the year.

    BRITISH POUND is gaining value as positive developments in US-Iran negotiations ease geopolitical risk, and strong domestic factors fuel upward momentum. Rising inflation expectations among UK businesses, alongside better-than-anticipated retail sales figures, are strengthening the case for the Bank of England to raise interest rates. The combined effect of these factors suggests a potential for further appreciation of the pound, supported by both external and internal economic forces.

    EURO is experiencing upward pressure, recovering from recent lows, primarily driven by speculation regarding potential advancements in US-Iran negotiations. Optimism surrounding these talks, fueled by reports of a possible breakthrough, is contributing to the euro’s renewed strength. Looking ahead, the upcoming ECB policy meeting will be crucial, as the central bank evaluates economic data, geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, and their potential impact on future monetary policy. While the ECB remains cautious, market expectations are building for future interest rate hikes, suggesting confidence in the Eurozone’s economic outlook in the medium term.

    JAPANESE YEN faces continued downward pressure as it approaches a key psychological level against the US dollar. Despite verbal warnings of intervention by Japanese authorities and a recent uptick in core inflation, the currency is weakening, driven by rising energy costs and the broader uncertainty stemming from geopolitical tensions in the Middle East. The Bank of Japan is expected to maintain its current monetary policy stance, further contributing to the yen’s vulnerability, particularly as Japan relies heavily on imported energy and is susceptible to inflationary pressures from global events.

    CANADIAN DOLLAR is gaining value, as evidenced by the recent decline in the USD/CAD exchange rate. This indicates that it now takes fewer Canadian dollars to purchase one US dollar compared to the previous trading day. Further bolstering this observation, the Canadian dollar has appreciated against the US dollar over both the past month and the past year, signaling a sustained strengthening trend.

    AUSTRALIAN DOLLAR faces downward pressure as global risk sentiment deteriorates due to ongoing Middle East tensions, impacting Asian equities and boosting demand for the US dollar as a safe haven. Concerns about energy supply disruptions further contribute to this negative outlook. However, the potential for an interest rate hike by the Reserve Bank of Australia, driven by a strong labor market and inflation, limits potential losses. Furthermore, a forthcoming economic security agreement between Japan and Australia, encompassing key commodities, offers some support to the currency’s value. Upcoming inflation data will be crucial in shaping future policy expectations and influencing the Australian Dollar’s trajectory.

    DOW JONES is likely to experience mixed influences. While positive earnings reports, particularly from companies like P&G, could provide upward momentum, the stagnation in US-Iran negotiations and the resulting surge in energy prices might act as a counterweight. The flat performance of Dow futures suggests a cautious outlook, indicating that gains may be limited compared to indices more heavily weighted towards the technology sector, which is currently benefiting from strong AI-related earnings. Therefore, the Dow Jones’s performance may be less pronounced than that of the S&P 500 or Nasdaq.

    FTSE 100 faces downward pressure amid geopolitical tensions surrounding US-Iran talks and the Strait of Hormuz, impacting sectors like banks, defence, pharma, and mining. Mondi’s cautionary outlook on rising costs further contributes to the negative sentiment. While positive retail sales data offers some support, concerns raised by a Bank of England policymaker about potential market corrections due to economic slowdown, private credit stress, and AI-driven repricing add to the overall bearish outlook, resulting in a weekly decline for the index. Energy and consumer stocks may offer some resilience due to higher oil prices.

    DAX is facing downward pressure due to geopolitical uncertainties stemming from stalled US-Iran peace talks and ongoing disruptions in the Hormuz Strait. President Trump’s extension of the Lebanon-Israel truce provides temporary relief, but oil price volatility persists. The mixed earnings season is also impacting the index, with weakness in aerospace and defense contrasting with strength in technology. Specific company performance, such as declines in MTU Aero Engines and Airbus, weigh on the index, while SAP’s positive results provide some support. Corporate restructuring plans from Bayer and shareholder scrutiny for Merck add to the market’s cautious sentiment, contributing to the index’s weekly decline.

    NIKKEI experienced a notable surge, reaching a new record high as investors reacted to recent inflation data and looked ahead to the Bank of Japan’s upcoming policy meeting. The rise in core inflation, although still under the central bank’s target, contributed to market sentiment. Anticipation is that interest rates will remain stable amidst global uncertainties, particularly those stemming from the Middle East and their impact on energy prices. Technology stocks played a significant role in the index’s gain, demonstrating strength across several key companies. Overall, the index showed positive weekly performance, contrasting with the broader Topix index.

    GOLD’s price is experiencing volatility influenced by geopolitical developments and macroeconomic factors. Tentative hopes for progress in US-Iran negotiations offer some upward pressure, with potential breakthroughs cited in Pakistani government sources; however, skepticism remains due to limited progress in prior talks and President Trump’s cautious stance. Counteracting this upward pressure, gold is on track for a weekly decline as peace negotiations have stalled. Furthermore, the closure of the Strait of Hormuz is contributing to higher energy prices, exacerbating inflation concerns and raising the likelihood of interest rate hikes, which negatively impact the appeal of gold as a non-yielding asset. Consequently, the outlook for gold is uncertain, dependent on the interplay between these conflicting factors.

    OIL experienced a downturn, retreating to $94.8 a barrel, ending a series of gains as optimism surrounding potential US-Iran diplomatic progress surfaced. The possibility of a negotiated resolution, potentially facilitated by Pakistan, injected uncertainty into the market. While prices dipped, oil is still poised for a substantial weekly increase of approximately 14%, indicating underlying market strength. US policy, specifically the ongoing naval blockade of Iranian ports, continues to significantly impact the global supply, maintaining pressure despite diplomatic overtures. Furthermore, activity involving sanctioned Iranian oil tankers near the Strait of Hormuz emphasizes persistent geopolitical risks that can influence supply chains and prices.