Category: JPY

  • Yen Resilience Tested as BoJ Hawks Circle – Friday, 15 May

    Where we are: USD/JPY is currently trading around 158.30, consolidating after a choppy overnight session. The pair remains elevated after testing resistance near 158.80 earlier in the week, and is holding above the psychological 158.00 level. The overnight range has been relatively contained between 157.90 and 158.45, leaving it roughly unchanged versus yesterday’s NY close.

    What’s driving it: The BoJ’s slow normalisation bias continues to underpin Yen sentiment, even as dollar strength persists. Board Member Masu’s speech highlighting the need for prompt interest rate hikes to combat persistent inflation risks stemming from the Iran war is resonating with markets. This hawkish rhetoric is supported by the spring shunto wage data, which consolidates the case for at least one more rate hike this year. However, the relentless pressure from USD strength and persistently high oil prices are providing significant headwinds to any sustained Yen appreciation.

    • The BoJ’s last decision on March 19th, holding rates at 0.50% while flagging further hikes if the outlook tracks projections, keeps a hawkish bias simmering.
    • CFTC data shows a crowded net-short JPY position (-61,738 contracts, 13th percentile), increasing the risk of a violent squeeze on any positive Yen catalyst.
    • Alphabet’s record Yen bond issuance highlights continued demand for Yen-denominated assets, potentially offering some support amidst broader weakness.

    NY session focus: All eyes will be on US data prints this morning, though without any directly conflicting Japanese data to act as a counterweight, these will likely be the dominant drivers. Watch for reactions around 158.00; a break below could trigger a short-covering rally, while a sustained move above 158.80 opens the door to further USD/JPY upside. The trade at risk is selling JPY based solely on carry, given the looming threat of BoJ intervention and the crowded short positioning. The pain trade here remains a rapid JPY appreciation, fueled by a risk-off event or a surprise BoJ policy shift, forcing a massive short squeeze.

  • NY Session Tactical Brief – Thursday, 14 May

    Regime: Mixed; VIX at 17.99 with US yields rising slightly and the DXY consolidating gains around 118.15 indicates a tentative risk-neutral stance.

    Today’s market themes:

    • Trump-Xi meeting impact: assessing US-China trade and oil relationship, especially regarding Iran sanctions.
    • US Retail Sales: markets are awaiting direction with Retail Sales release.
    • Crowded trades: the market is set up for a potential short squeeze, with several currencies and asset classes showing heavily skewed positioning.

    The setup: Traders are positioned for USD strength and are short GBP, JPY, and NZD. US retail sales data will be key to either confirming this bias or triggering a squeeze. Watch US 10Y yields; sustained move above 4.5% could exacerbate USD strength.

    Watch list (native time per event):

    • 07:00 London GBP: GDP m/m (forecast -0.1%, prior 0.5%)
    • 08:30 ET USD: Core Retail Sales m/m (forecast 0.7%, prior 1.9%)
    • 08:30 ET USD: Retail Sales m/m (forecast 0.5%, prior 1.7%)

    Bias by asset:

    • DXY:
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (US): Data dependent on Retail Sales, Fed policy on inflation.
      • Cross: Risk sentiment / global growth outlook drive flows
      • Levels: Support 117.80 / Resistance 118.30
    • EUR/USD:
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (EU): ECB rhetoric, EU data release sensitive to global narrative.
      • Cross: DXY strength, US-DE 10Y spread.
      • Levels: Support 1.1680 / Resistance 1.1740
    • GBP/USD (Cable):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (UK): GDP print spurring rate cut bets, Gilt yield declines.
      • Cross: DXY strength / US-UK 10Y widening
      • Levels: Support 1.2450 / Resistance 1.2520
    • USD/JPY:
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (JP): BoJ’s hawkish tone not enough to combat carry demand.
      • Cross: US 10Y strength / risk-on / intervention watch
      • Levels: Support 157.50 / Resistance 158.00
    • USD/CAD (Loonie):
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (CA): BoC policy path, oil price fluctuations are the driver.
      • Cross: DXY strength / US-CA 10Y differential.
      • Levels: Support 1.3680 / Resistance 1.3740
    • AUD/USD (Aussie):
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (AU): RBA policy path / key commodity prices affecting sentiment.
      • Cross: DXY correlation, China growth, US-AU 10Y
      • Levels: Support 0.7170 / Resistance 0.7230
    • NZD/USD (Kiwi):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (NZ): RBNZ dovish stance is the driver.
      • Cross: DXY direction, Risk / US-NZ 10Y
      • Levels: Support 0.5900 / Resistance 0.5950
    • USD/CHF (Swissy):
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (CH): SNB’s easing policy stance.
      • Cross: DXY strength, safe-haven demand fluctuation.
      • Levels: Support 0.7800 / Resistance 0.7850
    • EUR/GBP, EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY:
      • Direction (per cross): EUR/GBP Neutral, EUR/JPY Neutral, GBP/JPY Bearish
      • Domestic: Rate spreads/relative central bank stance
      • Cross: Risk, cross-of-crosses
      • Levels: Watch relative breaks; range trades
    • XAU (Gold):
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Real yields are the driver.
      • Cross: DXY influence, risk sentiment.
      • Levels: Support 4670 / Resistance 4700
    • XAG (Silver):
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Gold-Silver ratio influences direction.
      • Cross: DXY influence, risk correlation.
      • Levels: Support 30.40 / Resistance 30.70
    • WTI / Brent:
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Supply/demand influences, WTI-Brent Spread affects trend.
      • Cross: DXY influence, risk sentiment.
      • Levels: Support 100.50 / Resistance 102.50
    • Copper:
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (asset-specific): China growth outlook is the main driver.
      • Cross: Global growth sentiment.
      • Levels: Support 5.00 / Resistance 5.10
    • SPX:
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (US): Earnings, Fed policy influences market direction.
      • Cross: Risk regime, Global Tone, yields correlation.
      • Levels: Futures level Support 5330 / Resistance 5350.
    • NDX:
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (US): Mega-cap earnings are a major factor.
      • Cross: Rates / Volatility (VIX).
      • Levels: Support 18,750 / Resistance 18,850
    • US30 (Dow):
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (US): Industrial / Financial earnings support this.
      • Cross: Bond yield / overall market tone affecting direction.
      • Levels: Support 50,000 / Resistance 50,250
    • UK100 (FTSE):
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (UK): Domestic-centric influences such as Sterling performance.
      • Cross: Market Sentiment / US tone impacting direction.
      • Levels: Support 8,400 / Resistance 8,450
    • DAX:
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (DE): Domestic sentiment and yields.
      • Cross: US tech impacts, DXY correlation.
      • Levels: Support 24,350 / Resistance 24,450
    • Nikkei:
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (JP): JPY impacts, BOJ policy stance.
      • Cross: US tech influence, global risk factors.
      • Levels: Support 38,800 / Resistance 39,200
    • BTC:
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (asset-specific): ETF flow / on-chain metrics drive direction.
      • Cross: Risk sentiment & Nasdaq performance impact.
      • Levels: Support 61,500 / Resistance 62,500

    Positioning watch: AUD/USD, Copper, and Bitcoin are crowded longs, creating squeeze risk if data disappoints; GBP, JPY, and NZD are crowded shorts, vulnerable to upside surprises. CFTC shows dollar index positioning very stretched.

    The pain trade: A dovish tilt from the Fed combined with strong UK data and a resolution of Iran tensions would trigger a massive short squeeze in GBP, JPY, NZD, Gold, and rates.

  • Yen at Intervention Risk as Ueda Hawks Fade – Thursday, 14 May

    Where we are: USD/JPY is trading around 157.80, extending its overnight grind higher after failing to break conclusively below 156.00 in the prior session. The pair remains within spitting distance of levels that triggered heavy intervention earlier this month. The overnight range has been relatively contained, with key resistance still looming near those intervention levels.

    What’s driving it: BOJ board member Masu called for an early rate hike, joining a recent hawkish chorus, but this is failing to inspire lasting JPY strength. The market still lacks conviction on the pace of BOJ normalisation, especially given the relatively slow path implied by current policy settings, with the policy rate still at 0.50%. Rising US yields and a broadly stronger dollar index (118.0392) are exacerbating Yen weakness, overshadowing the BOJ’s hawkish signals and increasing the risk of intervention. Speculative positioning remains crowded short, with net non-commercial positions at -61,738 contracts – a 13th percentile reading indicating squeeze potential if the tide turns.

    • BOJ’s Masu calling for an early rate hike offers a limited bullish signal for JPY.
    • USD strength, supported by higher US yields (US 2Y at 4% and 10Y at 4.46%), puts consistent pressure on USD/JPY.
    • Crowded short positioning in JPY presents a significant squeeze risk.

    NY session focus: All eyes are on the 08:30 ET US Retail Sales print, with forecasts of 0.5% m/m growth. Strong data will likely accelerate the USD/JPY rally, while a miss could provide a temporary reprieve. The key level to watch remains the previous intervention zone around 158.00-158.50. The short JPY/long USD carry trade continues to be profitable, but intervention risk is a major headwind. The pain trade? A surprise dovish shift from the Fed coupled with a coordinated intervention that triggers a violent JPY short squeeze.

  • NY Session Tactical Brief – Wednesday, 13 May

    Regime: Mixed — VIX holding near 18.40 amid rising US real yields, capping risk appetite.

    Today’s market themes:

    • Real-rate repricing: Fed nomination vote and PPI data set to dictate the pace of the climb, pressuring gold and growth stocks.
    • Iran War Impact: Ongoing supply disruptions and inventory depletion boosting oil prices, triggering inventory concerns.
    • Crowded FX positions: Extreme positioning in AUD, NZD, JPY and GBP presents squeeze risks on data surprises.

    The setup: Rising real yields are the dominant force. Focus is on US PPI and the Fed nomination vote today to further define the Fed’s path. Watch for a continued bid in US yields to pressure equities and gold, with DXY bid into the European open. Key is whether 10Y TIPS break 2.00%.

    Watch list (native time per event):

    • 08:30 ET USD: Core PPI m/m (forecast 0.3%, prior 0.1%)
    • 08:30 ET USD: PPI m/m (forecast 0.5%, prior 0.5%)
    • 14:30 ET USD: Fed Chair Nomination Vote (forecast Pass, prior —)

    Bias by asset:

    • DXY:
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (US): Strong US data supports hawkish Fed, boosting USD.
      • Cross: Risk-off flows and rising US yields underpin the dollar.
      • Levels: Support 117.80, Resistance 118.50.
    • EUR/USD:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (EU): Eurozone growth concerns and relatively dovish ECB weigh on EUR.
      • Cross: Stronger USD and widening US-DE yield spread pressure EUR/USD.
      • Levels: Support 1.0760, Resistance 1.0820.
    • GBP/USD (Cable):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (UK): BoE easing expectations, pressured by persistent inflation, weigh on the Pound.
      • Cross: Stronger USD and widening US-UK yield spread pressure Cable.
      • Levels: Support 1.2460, Resistance 1.2520.
    • USD/JPY:
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (JP): BoJ still dovish relative to Fed; intervention risk lingers.
      • Cross: Higher US yields drive USD/JPY higher despite intervention risks.
      • Levels: Support 157.75, Resistance 158.50.
    • USD/CAD (Loonie):
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (CA): WTI price volatility offsets CAD strength from BoC rate cuts.
      • Cross: USD strength and widening US-CA yield spreads favor upside.
      • Levels: Support 1.3650, Resistance 1.3700.
    • AUD/USD (Aussie):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (AU): RBA easing expectations and weak CPI growth weigh on AUD.
      • Cross: Stronger USD and risk-off sentiment hurt the Aussie.
      • Levels: Support 0.7175, Resistance 0.7225.
    • NZD/USD (Kiwi):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (NZ): RBNZ dovishness and concerns about domestic demand hurt the Kiwi.
      • Cross: Stronger USD and risk-off sentiment weigh on NZD/USD.
      • Levels: Support 0.5900, Resistance 0.5950.
    • USD/CHF (Swissy):
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (CH): SNB intervention unlikely; Swiss yields remain low.
      • Cross: Risk-off flows less supportive with strong USD driving gains.
      • Levels: Support 0.7800, Resistance 0.7850.
    • EUR/GBP, EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY:
      • Direction (per cross): EUR/GBP: Neutral, EUR/JPY: Bullish, GBP/JPY: Bullish
      • Domestic: Relative CB stance — BoE slightly more hawkish than ECB. BoJ lags both.
      • Cross: DXY strength benefiting JPY crosses, risk tone dictates flows.
      • Levels: EUR/GBP: 0.8510-0.8560, EUR/JPY: 169.00-170.00, GBP/JPY: 192.80-193.80
    • XAU (Gold):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Rising real yields are a significant headwind.
      • Cross: Stronger USD and risk-off environment further pressure Gold.
      • Levels: Support $4,675, Resistance $4,725.
    • XAG (Silver):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Industrial demand is soft, Gold/Silver ratio rising.
      • Cross: Stronger USD and risk-off environment weigh on Silver.
      • Levels: Support $29.00, Resistance $29.50.
    • WTI / Brent:
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): IEA reports record draw in global oil inventories due to Iran War.
      • Cross: Risk sentiment generally supportive, but DXY strength a cap.
      • Levels: WTI Support $101.00, Resistance $103.00.
    • Copper:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): China growth concerns resurface, LME stocks remain high.
      • Cross: Global growth worries and DXY strength pressure Copper.
      • Levels: Support $5.00, Resistance $5.10.
    • SPX:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (US): Higher yields weigh on valuations, focus on earnings.
      • Cross: VIX spikes indicate potential for further downside risk.
      • Levels: Futures support 5200, resistance 5250 (cash: key levels to use).
    • NDX:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (US): Mega-cap tech vulnerable to higher real yields.
      • Cross: High rate sensitivity amplifies downside in risk-off environment.
      • Levels: Support 19,500, Resistance 19,700.
    • US30 (Dow):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (US): Cyclical sector earnings sensitive to rising yields.
      • Cross: Bond yield reaction to data key driver of Dow performance.
      • Levels: Support 39,000, Resistance 39,500.
    • UK100 (FTSE):
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (UK): Sterling strength offsetting positive global risk sentiment.
      • Cross: Global risk appetite supports, but US tone a key determinant.
      • Levels: Support 8350, Resistance 8400.
    • DAX:
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (DE): Bund yields stable; focus on EU sentiment indicators.
      • Cross: US tech performance influences DAX, DXY strength is a cap.
      • Levels: Support 24,000, Resistance 24,100.
    • Nikkei:
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (JP): JPY weakness supports, BoJ policy stance is key.
      • Cross: US tech performance and risk-on sentiment drive Nikkei.
      • Levels: Support 63,000, Resistance 63,500.
    • BTC:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Funding rates remain elevated, ETF flows slowing.
      • Cross: DXY strength and risk-off sentiment hurt Bitcoin. Nasdaq correlation matters.
      • Levels: Support $62,000, Resistance $63,000.

    Positioning watch: CFTC data shows crowded longs in AUD, Copper, and Bitcoin (above 80th percentile), vulnerable to a squeeze on any downside surprises. Crowded shorts in GBP, JPY and NZD present an upside risk.

    The pain trade: A surprise dovish tilt from the Fed on the nomination vote or a much weaker-than-expected PPI print would trigger a short squeeze in crowded USD shorts and boost risk assets, especially the crowded AUD/USD longs.

  • Yen Under Pressure as Hawkish Ueda Rhetoric Fails to Impress – Wednesday, 13 May

    Where we are: USD/JPY is trading at 158.15, grinding higher after a brief dip overnight. The pair is trading near the upper end of its recent range, a whisker away from testing prior intervention levels, and above yesterday’s NY close of 157.80. The path of least resistance remains higher, fuelled by a potent combination of BoJ caution and resilient dollar strength.

    What’s driving it: Despite Ueda’s recent comments flagging a willingness to hike further if the outlook tracks projections, the market remains unconvinced of aggressive BoJ tightening. The slow normalisation bias is firmly entrenched, and traders are hesitant to price in significant rate hikes until concrete evidence of sustained inflation emerges. This dovish perception continues to weigh on the Yen, particularly as US yields remain elevated. Dollar strength, reflected in the USD Broad Index at 118.0392, is further compounding the pressure on USD/JPY, with 2Y US yields at 3.95% offering a compelling carry advantage against the Yen.

    • The Summary of Opinions from the Bank of Japan’s April meeting indicated policymakers discussed the possibility of additional rate hikes, but these signals haven’t translated into sustained Yen strength.
    • Speculative positioning remains heavily short Yen, with net non-commercial positions at -61,738 contracts. This equates to the 13th percentile over the last 52 weeks, creating a notable squeeze risk if the BoJ surprises hawkishly.
    • Rising US 10Y real yields, currently at 1.95%, continue to support the dollar and weigh on risk assets, including the Yen.

    NY session focus: All eyes are on the 08:30 ET US PPI print. A hotter-than-expected reading will reinforce expectations for tighter Fed policy and likely drive USD/JPY towards prior intervention levels north of 158.50. Conversely, a significant downside surprise could trigger a short squeeze, potentially pushing the pair back towards 157.00. Keep an eye on the 14:30 ET Fed Chair Nomination Vote; a surprise outcome here is highly unlikely but could spark some volatility. The trade that’s working is fading Yen strength, but the risk is a surprise intervention or a hawkish shift from the BoJ. The pain trade for USD/JPY remains a sustained period of risk aversion coupled with a hawkish BoJ pivot.

  • NY Session Tactical Brief – Tuesday, 12 May

    Regime: Risk-off, driven by stronger-than-expected US CPI data and escalating Middle East tensions, pushing the VIX higher and US 10Y yields up 5bp to 4.43%.

    Today’s market themes:

    • Real-rate repricing: Hotter CPI print fuels hawkish Fed bets, pressuring risk assets.
    • Geopolitical risk: Iran war uncertainty keeps oil elevated, supporting inflation concerns.
    • Crowded shorts: Potential for squeeze in JPY, GBP, and NZD if risk sentiment improves.

    The setup: The stronger-than-expected US CPI print has triggered a hawkish repricing of Fed expectations, sending US yields higher and the dollar stronger. This is pressuring risk assets, particularly tech and emerging markets. The trade is to fade rallies in risk assets, but watch for potential short squeezes in crowded short currencies if geopolitical risks abate or US data disappoints. US 10Y at 4.43%, DXY at 98.25.

    Watch list (native time per event):

    • 08:30 ET USD: Core CPI m/m (forecast 0.3%, prior 0.2%)
    • 11:59 ET USD: Fed Chair Nomination Vote (forecast Pass, prior —)
    • 11:30 AEST AUD: Wage Price Index q/q (forecast 0.8%, prior 0.8%)

    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): Hawkish Fed repricing on CPI beat. Rising US yields support.
      • Cross: Risk-off flows, safe-haven demand, EM weakness.
      • Levels: Resistance at 98.50, support at 98.00.
    • EUR/USD:
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (EU): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response.
      • Cross: Stronger DXY, widening US-DE 10Y yield spread, risk-off sentiment.
      • Levels: Resistance at 1.0800, support at 1.0750.
    • GBP/USD (Cable):
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (UK): Rising UK borrowing costs pressure.
      • Cross: Stronger DXY, widening US-UK 10Y yield spread, risk aversion.
      • Levels: Resistance at 1.3550, support at 1.3500.
    • USD/JPY:
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (JP): BoJ remains dovish. Intervention risk looming.
      • Cross: Higher US 10Y yields, strong DXY, risk-off bids into USD.
      • Levels: Resistance at 158.00, support at 157.00.
    • USD/CAD (Loonie):
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (CA): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response.
      • Cross: Stronger DXY, US-CA 10Y yield spread widening.
      • Levels: Resistance at 1.3750, support at 1.3700.
    • AUD/USD (Aussie):
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (AU): Awaiting Wage Price Index data.
      • Cross: Stronger DXY, US-AU 10Y yield spread widening, risk aversion.
      • Levels: Resistance at 0.7220, support at 0.7175.
    • NZD/USD (Kiwi):
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (NZ): RBNZ easing bias remains in place.
      • Cross: Stronger DXY, US-NZ 10Y yield spread widening, risk-off flows.
      • Levels: Resistance at 0.5960, support at 0.5920.
    • USD/CHF (Swissy):
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (CH): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response.
      • Cross: Stronger DXY, waning safe-haven appeal of CHF.
      • Levels: Resistance at 0.7820, support at 0.7780.
    • EUR/GBP, EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY:
      • Direction (per cross): EUR/GBP: Neutral, EUR/JPY: Bearish, GBP/JPY: Bearish.
      • Domestic: Relative central bank policy divergence remains key driver.
      • Cross: DXY strength supports JPY and GBP.
      • Levels: Monitor individual cross support/resistance.
    • XAU (Gold):
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Rising real yields pressure gold.
      • Cross: Stronger DXY, risk-off flows less supportive with rates rising.
      • Levels: Resistance at $4,720, support at $4,680.
    • XAG (Silver):
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (asset-specific): No fresh catalyst — sensitive to overall risk tone.
      • Cross: Stronger DXY, risk-off sentiment, industrial demand concerns.
      • Levels: Monitor gold for direction, lower volatility.
    • WTI / Brent:
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Supply disruption fears, escalating geopolitical tensions.
      • Cross: Weaker DXY provides some support, but risk-off a headwind.
      • Levels: Watch for Iran ceasefire news.
    • Copper:
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (asset-specific): China growth concerns weigh.
      • Cross: Stronger DXY, global growth proxy suffers from risk-off sentiment.
      • Levels: Monitor China data.
    • SPX:
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (US): Higher yields, earnings rotation away from growth.
      • Cross: Elevated VIX, global risk-off sentiment.
      • Levels: Futures at 5185. Support at 5170, resistance at 5200.
    • NDX:
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (US): Sensitive to real yields, mega-cap earnings under pressure.
      • Cross: Rates sensitivity, VIX elevation.
      • Levels: Monitor tech stocks for price action.
    • US30 (Dow):
      • Direction: Neutral.
      • Domestic (US): Financials and industrials facing mixed earnings.
      • Cross: Bond-yield reaction muted.
      • Levels: Trading near flatline, awaiting catalyst.
    • UK100 (FTSE):
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (UK): Weaker Sterling, higher Gilt yields.
      • Cross: Global risk, US tone negative.
      • Levels: Trading lower in Europe.
    • DAX:
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (DE): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response.
      • Cross: US tech weakness, stronger DXY, risk aversion.
      • Levels: Trading lower on lack of drivers.
    • Nikkei:
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (JP): JPY weakness capped by intervention risk.
      • Cross: US tech selling pressure, risk off.
      • Levels: High close, vulnerable to correction.
    • BTC:
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Funding rates easing, ETF flows slowing.
      • Cross: Stronger DXY, risk aversion, Nasdaq correlation.
      • Levels: Finding soft support after overnight retreat.

    Positioning watch: CFTC data shows crowded longs in AUD, USD, Copper, and Bitcoin, creating potential downside risk if data disappoints or risk sentiment shifts. Crowded shorts in JPY, GBP, and NZD present squeeze potential if risk appetite recovers.

    The pain trade: A surprise dovish signal from the Fed Chair Nomination Vote, coupled with weaker-than-expected US data later in the week, would trigger a sharp short squeeze in JPY, GBP, and NZD, while simultaneously hammering the USD.

  • Yen Under Pressure as Rate Hike Bets Pare Back – Tuesday, 12 May

    Where we are: USD/JPY is trading around 157.50, edging higher after a choppy overnight session. The pair has been range-bound between 157.20 and 157.80 since the Tokyo open, still testing levels close to the intervention zone that prompted MoF action recently. This level continues to be a key area of contention for traders.

    What’s driving it: The Yen is under pressure as markets re-evaluate the likelihood of near-term BoJ rate hikes. Despite the BoJ minutes from the April meeting suggesting a potential hike as early as June, caution prevails given the lack of concrete commitment. This dovish interpretation is amplified by a broader dollar bid ahead of key US CPI data. The 10Y JGB yield remains anchored below 1.0%, offering limited support to the Yen.

    • The BoJ debated a near-term rate hike at the April meeting, but this has not translated into firm expectations given external uncertainties.
    • Speculative positioning remains crowded short JPY, at the 13th percentile, presenting an asymmetric squeeze risk should the BoJ surprise hawkishly.
    • Finance Minister Katayama’s meeting with US Treasury Secretary Bessent, while reiterating close coordination on currency policy, also implies continued tolerance for Yen weakness within certain bounds.

    NY session focus: All eyes are on the 08:30 ET US CPI release, with forecasts of 0.6% m/m for the headline and 0.3% for the core. Stronger-than-expected prints will likely fuel further USD strength and push USD/JPY towards 158.00, potentially triggering renewed intervention warnings. A weaker CPI, however, could see a sharp reversal towards 156.80, squeezing the crowded JPY short positions. The Fed Chair Nomination Vote due at 11:59 ET is expected to pass, but any surprise there could add volatility. The prevailing trade is to fade JPY strength, but the intervention risk remains a key deterrent. The pain trade is a BoJ signal that they are ready to move pre-emptively to support the currency, prompting a violent short squeeze.

  • NY Session Tactical Brief – Monday, 11 May

    Regime: Risk-off, with oil spiking on escalating Middle East tensions and Trump rejecting Iran’s peace offer, VIX at 17.08 and 10Y yields slightly higher.

    Today’s market themes:

    • Geopolitical Risk: Middle East tensions driving oil and safe-haven flows.
    • Rate Divergence: CB policy driving FX crosses, particularly EUR/GBP and EUR/JPY.
    • Commodity Strength: Silver and Copper continue to show strong performance.

    The setup: Geopolitical tensions are escalating quickly, pushing oil higher and boosting safe-haven demand. The market is pricing in a higher risk of supply disruptions from the Middle East. Watch for further headlines as the situation develops; a break above $105 in Brent could trigger a larger risk-off move. US 10Y yield is at 4.393%.

    Watch list (native time per event):

    • 09:30 CST CNY: CPI y/y (forecast 0.9%, prior 1.0%)
    • 09:30 CST CNY: PPI y/y (forecast 1.7%, prior 0.5%)

    Bias by asset:

    • DXY:
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (US): Fed watching data; US yields steady
      • Cross: Geopolitical risk-off; Euro weakness capping upside
      • Levels: Support: 97.80, Resistance: 98.03
    • EUR/USD:
      • Direction: Down
      • Domestic (EU): ECB divergence widening vs BoE and Fed
      • Cross: DXY strength / US-DE 10Y spread widening / Risk-off
      • Levels: Support: 1.1749, Resistance: 1.1782
    • GBP/USD (Cable):
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (UK): BoE hawkish hold / higher Gilt yields supporting
      • Cross: DXY / US-UK 10Y spread / Risk-off offsets domestic strength
      • Levels: Support: 1.3570, Resistance: 1.3616
    • USD/JPY:
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (JP): BoJ dovish / JGB yields capped / Intervention watch
      • Cross: Higher US 10Y yield / DXY / risk regime
      • Levels: Support: 156.76, Resistance: 157.18
    • USD/CAD (Loonie):
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (CA): BoC dovish / WTI strength offset by CAD weakness
      • Cross: DXY / US-CA 10Y spread
      • Levels: Support: 1.3661, Resistance: 1.3695
    • AUD/USD (Aussie):
      • Direction: Down
      • Domestic (AU): RBA neutral / China data sensitivity
      • Cross: DXY strength / US-AU 10Y / China growth uncertainty
      • Levels: Support: 0.7220, Resistance: 0.7249
    • NZD/USD (Kiwi):
      • Direction: Down
      • Domestic (NZ): RBNZ dovish / dairy prices lackluster
      • Cross: DXY strength / US-NZ 10Y / risk-off sentiment
      • Levels: Support: 0.5939, Resistance: 0.5957
    • USD/CHF (Swissy):
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (CH): SNB dovish / Swiss yields low
      • Cross: DXY strength / safe-haven unwinding
      • Levels: Support: 0.7774, Resistance: 0.7795
    • EUR/GBP, EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY:
      • Direction (per cross): EUR/GBP: Down; EUR/JPY: Up; GBP/JPY: Up
      • Domestic: EUR/GBP: BoE vs ECB; EUR/JPY & GBP/JPY: rate divergence
      • Cross: DXY / risk regime / cross-of-crosses dynamics
      • Levels: EUR/GBP: 0.8647/0.8668; EUR/JPY: 184.39/185.02; GBP/JPY: 212.73/213.87
    • XAU (Gold):
      • Direction: Down
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Rising real yields / ETF outflows
      • Cross: DXY strength / risk-off demand limited
      • Levels: Support: 4655.6, Resistance: 4714.2
    • XAG (Silver):
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Industrial demand / Gold strength
      • Cross: DXY / risk regime
      • Levels: Support: 7953.000, Resistance: 8418.000
    • WTI / Brent:
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Geopolitical risk / potential supply disruption
      • Cross: DXY / risk regime
      • Levels: WTI: Support: 96.64, Resistance: 100.35; Brent: Support: 102.90, Resistance: 105.97
    • Copper:
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (asset-specific): China stimulus / LME stock levels
      • Cross: DXY / global growth proxy
      • Levels: Support: 625.4000, Resistance: 641.4300
    • SPX:
      • Direction: Down
      • Domestic (US): higher yields / earnings plateau
      • Cross: VIX rising / global risk aversion
      • Levels: Futures support: 7391.00, Resistance: 7420.25, Cash support: 7398.90
    • NDX:
      • Direction: Down
      • Domestic (US): Real yields / AI bubble potential
      • Cross: Rates sensitive / Rising VIX
      • Levels: Futures support: 29227.50, Resistance: 29399.25
    • US30 (Dow):
      • Direction: Down
      • Domestic (US): Cyclical rotation out / yields impact
      • Cross: bond-yield reaction
      • Levels: Futures support: 49471, Resistance: 49706
    • UK100 (FTSE):
      • Direction: Down
      • Domestic (UK): Sterling strength / Gilt yields rising
      • Cross: global risk aversion / US tone
      • Levels: Support: 22742, Resistance: 22850
    • DAX:
      • Direction: Down
      • Domestic (DE): Lower Bund yields / weaker outlook
      • Cross: US tech weakness / DXY / risk regime
      • Levels: Support: 24204, Resistance: 24362
    • Nikkei:
      • Direction: Down
      • Domestic (JP): Strong JPY / JGB yields rising slightly
      • Cross: US tech weakness / risk regime
      • Levels: Support: 62393, Resistance: 63385
    • BTC:
      • Direction: Down
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Crowded longs / Funding rates high
      • Cross: DXY / risk regime / Nasdaq correlation
      • Levels: Support: 62393, Resistance: 63385

    Positioning watch: AUD/USD and Bitcoin are crowded longs (96th and 83rd percentile, respectively), making them vulnerable to a squeeze lower on any disappointment or USD strength. GBP and JPY are crowded shorts, a positive surprise could trigger a squeeze higher.

    The pain trade: A surprise de-escalation in Middle East tensions combined with a dovish signal from the Fed would trigger a massive short squeeze in USD/JPY and GBP/USD, while simultaneously crushing oil prices and unwinding crowded long positions in AUD and BTC.

  • Yen Under Pressure as Yield Spreads Widen – Monday, 11 May

    Where we are: USD/JPY is currently trading at 157.11, up 0.22% on the day, having traded in a tight 156.76-157.18 range so far. This marks a continuation of the recent upward trend, with the pair testing levels not seen since intervention zones were previously defended. The pair is up from Friday’s close, and appears to be ignoring the pre-NY session weakness in Nasdaq futures.

    What’s driving it: JGB yields are modestly higher, with the 10-year up 3bp to 2.513%, but this is being overshadowed by the widening US-Japan yield differential. The Bank of Japan’s slow normalisation bias continues to weigh on the Yen, particularly as markets increasingly price in further Fed hikes. With Ueda flagging a willingness to hike further only if the outlook tracks projections, the bar for hawkish BoJ surprises remains high. A further headwind comes from a strong bid for USD related to geopolitical stress.

    • The US-JP 10Y yield spread is at +188bp, providing significant upward pressure on USD/JPY.
    • Speculative positioning in JPY remains crowded short at the 13th percentile, raising the risk of a squeeze on any hawkish BoJ surprises or intervention.
    • Bloomberg reports Alphabet is planning a debut Yen bond sale as AI race accelerates.

    NY session focus: All eyes remain on the level of intervention from Japanese authorities. Keep a close eye on the 157.25 level as a key area of potential resistance, with a break above potentially opening the door to further upside. Conversely, a move below 156.75 would suggest intervention is having a meaningful impact. We expect dip-buying to remain a core feature of the order book. The US calendar is light today; the focus will be on risk sentiment from Wall Street open, and any headlines regarding Iran. The pain trade is a surprise intervention that triggers a violent short squeeze.

  • NY Session Tactical Brief – Friday, 8 May

    Regime: Risk-on, as equity futures surge on hopes of softer US payrolls and bond yields drift lower (US 10Y at 4.357%).

    Today’s market themes:

    • US Payrolls showdown: markets bracing for a potential dovish surprise amid a crowded USD long positioning.
    • Iran tensions: Oil prices remain volatile amid geopolitical instability and supply concerns.
    • Central Bank Divergence: Focus on Lagarde and Bailey speeches while watching BoJ comments regarding JPY.

    The setup: The market is pricing in a weaker-than-expected US jobs report, fueling a rally in risk assets. The crowded USD long position leaves room for a significant squeeze if the data disappoints. Watch US 10Y yield response to payrolls and the DXY level around 97.77.

    Watch list (native time per event):

    • 08:30 ET USD: Non-Farm Employment Change (forecast 65K, prior 178K)
    • 08:30 ET CAD: Employment Change (forecast 12.9K, prior 14.1K)
    • 13:20 London GBP: BOE Gov Bailey Speaks

    Bias by asset:

    • DXY:
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (US): Fed policy outlook dependent on US data, especially labor market.
      • Cross: Risk sentiment dependent on USD strength, FX cross flows.
      • Levels: Support at 97.50, resistance at 98.20.
    • EUR/USD:
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (EU): ECB’s rhetoric, core inflation and German Bund yields.
      • Cross: DXY weakness, US-DE 10Y spread favoring EUR, positive risk sentiment.
      • Levels: Support at 1.1700, resistance at 1.1800.
    • GBP/USD (Cable):
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (UK): BoE policy guidance, Gilt yields, services CPI.
      • Cross: DXY weakness, US-UK 10Y spread, risk on sentiment.
      • Levels: Support at 1.3550, resistance at 1.3650.
    • USD/JPY:
      • Direction: Neutral.
      • Domestic (JP): BoJ policy, JGB yield curve control, intervention threat.
      • Cross: US 10Y yields, DXY direction, risk appetite.
      • Levels: Support at 156.00, resistance at 157.00.
    • USD/CAD (Loonie):
      • Direction: Neutral.
      • Domestic (CA): BoC policy, Employment change data and WTI correlation.
      • Cross: DXY direction, US-CA 10Y yield spread.
      • Levels: Support at 1.3600, resistance at 1.3700.
    • AUD/USD (Aussie):
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (AU): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response.
      • Cross: DXY weakness, US-AU 10Y spread, China growth outlook.
      • Levels: Support at 0.7200, resistance at 0.7250.
    • NZD/USD (Kiwi):
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (NZ): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response.
      • Cross: DXY weakness, US-NZ 10Y spread, risk appetite.
      • Levels: Support at 0.5900, resistance at 0.5975.
    • USD/CHF (Swissy):
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (CH): SNB stance and Swiss yield curve.
      • Cross: DXY weakness, safe-haven demand.
      • Levels: Support at 0.7750, resistance at 0.7810.
    • EUR/GBP, EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY:
      • Direction (per cross): EUR/GBP: Neutral, EUR/JPY: Bullish, GBP/JPY: Bullish.
      • Domestic: Relative CB policy, relative yield spreads drive direction.
      • Cross: DXY, risk regime, cross-of-crosses dynamics.
      • Levels: Watch key technical levels, sensitive to GBP and JPY crosses.
    • XAU (Gold):
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Real yields trending lower, rising breakevens, central bank demand.
      • Cross: DXY weakness, risk-off sentiment.
      • Levels: Support at 4700, resistance at 4750.
    • XAG (Silver):
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Industrial demand expectations, gold-silver ratio.
      • Cross: DXY weakness, risk appetite.
      • Levels: Support at 8100, resistance at 8200.
    • WTI / Brent:
      • Direction: Mixed.
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Iran tensions, EIA inventory data, OPEC output levels.
      • Cross: DXY, risk sentiment.
      • Levels: Watch inventory reports, supply disruptions.
    • Copper:
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Positive China growth outlook, LME stocks, supply issues.
      • Cross: DXY, global growth.
      • Levels: Support at 625, resistance at 635.
    • SPX:
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (US): Earnings season, Fed policy outlook, US yield reaction.
      • Cross: VIX suppression, global sentiment.
      • Levels: Futures resistance at 7420, cash support 7330.
    • NDX:
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (US): Mega-cap tech earnings, real yields and AI investments.
      • Cross: Rates sensitivity, low VIX environment.
      • Levels: Support at 28800, resistance at 29000.
    • US30 (Dow):
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (US): Industrial earnings, cyclical sentiment.
      • Cross: Bond yields response.
      • Levels: Support at 49500, resistance at 50000.
    • UK100 (FTSE):
      • Direction: Neutral.
      • Domestic (UK): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response.
      • Cross: Global risk, and US macro performance.
      • Levels: Support at 22800, resistance at 22950.
    • DAX:
      • Direction: Neutral.
      • Domestic (DE): German Bund yields and broader Eurozone sentiment.
      • Cross: US Tech, DXY, risk appetite.
      • Levels: Support at 24400, resistance at 24550.
    • Nikkei:
      • Direction: Neutral.
      • Domestic (JP): JPY strength sensitivity, JGB yields, BoJ policy.
      • Cross: US tech, global risk appetite.
      • Levels: Support at 62500, resistance at 62800.
    • BTC:
      • Direction: Neutral.
      • Domestic (asset-specific): ETF inflows, on-chain activity, funding rate.
      • Cross: DXY direction, risk sentiment, and Nasdaq correlation.
      • Levels: Support at $79,000, resistance at $80,500.

    Positioning watch: USD, AUD and BTC are crowded longs, S&P, Nasdaq, GBP, JPY and NZD are crowded shorts. A strong payrolls number will amplify the USD short squeeze while a weak number risks a violent short squeeze in GBP, JPY and Nasdaq.

    The pain trade: A strong US jobs report would trigger a massive USD rally, crush risk assets, and inflict maximum pain on the crowded short positions in GBP, JPY and tech stocks.

  • Yen Bears Still in Charge Despite Intervention Threat – Friday, 8 May

    Where we are: USD/JPY is currently trading at 156.55, down 0.19% on the day, after a relatively contained overnight range of 156.53-156.99. The pair remains elevated, consolidating after recent spikes higher and still well above the 156 handle. This level is particularly important given the previous intervention zones flagged by the market.

    What’s driving it: The primary driver remains the persistent yield differential between the US and Japan. The BoJ’s slow normalisation bias, reinforced by wage data suggesting only one more hike this year, contrasts starkly with US yields. While verbal intervention from Japanese officials is increasing, the market’s focus is squarely on actual policy adjustments. The US 10-year yield at 4.357% versus the Japanese 10-year at 2.473%—a spread of +188bp—continues to favor dollar strength despite the recent DXY pullback to 97.77.

    • BoJ held rates at 0.50% in March, signalling a willingness to hike further if warranted, but the pace remains glacial.
    • Reuters reports Japan is betting on Washington and the BoJ for “extra punch” in the yen battle, suggesting coordinated action is not off the table.
    • CFTC data shows net non-commercial JPY positioning is heavily short at -102,059 contracts, in the 0th percentile, leaving it ripe for a squeeze if sentiment shifts.

    NY session focus: The focus today will be on the 08:30 ET US jobs report, particularly the Non-Farm Employment Change (forecast 65K) and Average Hourly Earnings (forecast 0.3%). A strong print will likely reinforce dollar strength and send USD/JPY higher, testing the resolve of Japanese authorities. Watch for a potential break above 157.00 which could accelerate the move. Conversely, a weak print could trigger a short squeeze, targeting 155.00 initially. Traders should also be mindful of the 10:00 ET Prelim UoM Consumer Sentiment release and any commentary from President Trump at 12:00 ET. The pain trade here is a coordinated intervention that finally breaks the back of the Yen shorts.

  • NY Session Tactical Brief – Thursday, 7 May

    Regime: Mixed, with VIX holding steady at 17.38 and US yields slightly lower, suggesting a cautious risk-on sentiment tempered by geopolitical tensions.

    Today’s market themes:

    • Mideast Peace Potential: Easing oil supply concerns dominate, pressuring crude and boosting risk assets.
    • Dollar Weakness: DXY continues its descent, supporting EUR, GBP, AUD, and gold.
    • Earnings Rotation: Focus shifts to industrial and financial earnings in the US after tech-led rally.

    The setup: Markets are pricing in a higher probability of a Middle East peace deal, driving WTI down nearly 6% to $90.21. This is providing a tailwind for risk assets, especially equities. However, crowded positioning in USD and Aussie could trigger a squeeze on any hawkish surprises. Watch US Unemployment Claims at 08:30 ET.

    Watch list (native time per event):

    • 08:30 ET USD: Unemployment Claims (forecast 205K, prior 189K)
    • 10:00 ET USD: Factory Orders (prior 0.8%)
    • 14:00 BST GBP: BoE’s Breeden speaks on Inflation

    Bias by asset:

    • DXY:
      • Direction: Down
      • Domestic (US): Fed likely to remain cautious; watch claims data.
      • Cross: Risk-on sentiment weighing; EUR and GBP strength.
      • Levels: Resistance at 97.90, support at 97.65.
    • EUR/USD:
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (EU): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response.
      • Cross: DXY weakness, positive risk sentiment, US-DE 10Y widening.
      • Levels: Support at 1.1740, resistance at 1.1800.
    • GBP/USD (Cable):
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (UK): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response.
      • Cross: DXY weakness, boosted by positive risk sentiment.
      • Levels: Support at 1.3590, resistance at 1.3650.
    • USD/JPY:
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (JP): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response.
      • Cross: US 10Y stable, risk-on environment, intervention risk high.
      • Levels: Support at 156.00, resistance at 156.50.
    • USD/CAD (Loonie):
      • Direction: Down
      • Domestic (CA): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response.
      • Cross: WTI weakness, DXY direction, US-CA 10Y spread.
      • Levels: Support at 1.3620, resistance at 1.3650.
    • AUD/USD (Aussie):
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (AU): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response.
      • Cross: DXY weakness, China growth optimism.
      • Levels: Support at 0.7230, resistance at 0.7270.
    • NZD/USD (Kiwi):
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (NZ): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response.
      • Cross: DXY weakness, positive risk sentiment.
      • Levels: Support at 0.5950, resistance at 0.5990.
    • USD/CHF (Swissy):
      • Direction: Down
      • Domestic (CH): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response.
      • Cross: DXY weakness, safe-haven outflows into risk-on.
      • Levels: Support at 0.7770, resistance at 0.7800.
    • EUR/GBP, EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY:
      • Direction (per cross): EUR/GBP neutral, EUR/JPY up, GBP/JPY up
      • Domestic: Relative hawkishness of BoE priced in; BoJ dovish.
      • Cross: Risk-on favoring JPY crosses; DXY impact on EUR/GBP.
      • Levels: Monitor ranges, relative yield direction key.
    • XAU (Gold):
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Rising as breakevens rise; CB demand supportive.
      • Cross: DXY weakness, safe haven demand diminishing.
      • Levels: Support at 4700, resistance at 4765.
    • XAG (Silver):
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Industrial demand supportive.
      • Cross: DXY weakness, positive risk sentiment.
      • Levels: Support at 8000, resistance at 8250.
    • WTI / Brent:
      • Direction: Down
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Peace deal/higher supply.
      • Cross: DXY strength would add to move lower; risk aversion would add to move lower.
      • Levels: Support at 90.00, resistance at 96.00.
    • Copper:
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (asset-specific): China rebound expectations/LME-stock
      • Cross: Global growth proxy; Dollar strength a headwind
      • Levels: Support at 615, resistance at 625
    • SPX:
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (US): Earnings momentum; rates stabilize.
      • Cross: Positive global tone, VIX suppression.
      • Levels: Futures support at 7380, resistance at 7410, cash support 7300.
    • NDX:
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (US): Mega-cap tech earnings supportive/ AI narrative.
      • Cross: Lower rates sensitivity, high beta.
      • Levels: Resistance at 28800, support 28600.
    • US30 (Dow):
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (US): Rebound in industrial earnings; cyclical shift.
      • Cross: Responding positively to bond-yield relief.
      • Levels: Resistance near 50200, support at 49900.
    • UK100 (FTSE):
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (UK): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response.
      • Cross: Global risk, benefiting from oil decline.
      • Levels: Support at 22800, resistance at 23000.
    • DAX:
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (DE): Bund yields stable; weak economic data.
      • Cross: Watching US tech strength; risk-on sentiment.
      • Levels: Support at 24850, resistance at 25000.
    • Nikkei:
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (JP): JPY weakness driving earnings.
      • Cross: Catching up with US tech performance; risk-on buying.
      • Levels: Support at 62000, resistance at 63000.
    • BTC:
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (asset-specific): ETF flow-dependent, funding elevated.
      • Cross: risk-regime, positive overall, high correlation to tech.
      • Levels: Support at 80500, resistance at 81700.

    Positioning watch: CFTC data shows crowded longs in AUD, Copper, and Bitcoin (>90th percentile) and crowded shorts in JPY, GBP, and Nasdaq (

    The pain trade: A hawkish surprise from the US Unemployment Claims, triggering a USD rally and sending risk assets lower, would hurt the most positions.

  • USD/JPY Pressure Remains High, Intervention Risk Looms – Thursday, 7 May

    Where we are: USD/JPY is currently trading at 156.25, essentially unchanged on the day within a tight 156.02-156.52 range. Despite suspected intervention earlier in the week, the pair remains stubbornly close to recent highs. This level is testing the resolve of Japanese authorities and the market’s perception of their commitment to defending the Yen.

    What’s driving it: The slow normalisation bias of the Bank of Japan continues to weigh on the Yen. While wage data supports the case for another rate hike this year, the market is clearly pricing in a slower pace of tightening compared to other major central banks. Furthermore, the widening US-Japan 10-year yield spread, currently at +184bp, continues to make USD/JPY an attractive carry trade, exacerbating the pressure on the Yen.

    • The March BoJ meeting minutes released overnight offered little new information, confirming the existing gradualist approach.
    • Finance Minister Katayama’s recent warnings of “decisive measures” against speculative trading serve as a constant reminder of intervention risk.
    • Crowded short JPY positioning (net non-commercial at -102,059 contracts, 0th percentile), despite recent suspected interventions, raises the spectre of a potential squeeze should the BoJ deliver a hawkish surprise.

    NY session focus: The 08:30 ET US Unemployment Claims release will be closely watched, though the primary focus remains on any potential intervention from the BoJ. Key levels to watch are the recent high of 156.52, and the 156.00 level as an immediate support zone. The working trade remains short JPY, though traders are clearly wary of headline risk. The trade at risk is those aggressively short USD/JPY who may be forced to cover on any hawkish BoJ rhetoric or surprise intervention. The pain trade is a sustained break above 157, forcing widespread short covering and triggering further intervention.

  • NY Session Tactical Brief – Wednesday, 6 May

    Regime: Risk-on, fuelled by falling US yields and hopes of de-escalation in the Middle East; VIX is elevated but failing to hold gains.

    Today’s market themes:

    • Geopolitical relief rally: Equities and gold gain on reports of a potential US-Iran deal, sending oil sharply lower.
    • Dovish ECB spillovers: European yields are sharply lower after ECB commentary and stable wage data, supporting European equities.
    • Crowded short squeeze: Risk assets supported by potential short squeeze with CFTC data showing traders are heavily short JPY and Nasdaq.

    The setup: Oil’s sharp decline is the key driver today, prompting a rotation into risk assets, and supporting gold. The trade is to fade the rally in gold as real yields remain positive. Key risk is a breakdown in the US-Iran deal, which would send oil prices sharply higher again and reverse the risk-on tone.

    Watch list (native time per event):

    • 08:15 ET USD: ADP Non-Farm Employment Change (118K vs 62K)
    • 10:00 ET CAD: Ivey PMI (49.9 vs 49.7)
    • 16:15 ET CAD: BOC Gov Macklem Speaks

    Bias by asset:

    • DXY:
      • Direction: Down
      • Domestic (US): US data will be crucial in determining the next direction.
      • Cross: Risk sentiment and falling US yields are weighing.
      • Levels: Support at 97.50, resistance at 98.00.
    • EUR/USD:
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (EU): Lower Bund yields are supporting as ECB turns dovish.
      • Cross: Weaker DXY and positive risk sentiment are supportive.
      • Levels: Support at 1.1700, resistance at 1.1800.
    • GBP/USD (Cable):
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (UK): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response.
      • Cross: DXY weakness and risk appetite are key drivers.
      • Levels: Support at 1.3550, resistance at 1.3650.
    • USD/JPY:
      • Direction: Down
      • Domestic (JP): Intervention risk remains, limiting JPY weakness.
      • Cross: Falling US 10Y yields and a weaker DXY are pressuring.
      • Levels: Support at 155.00, resistance at 157.00.
    • USD/CAD (Loonie):
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (CA): BoC speakers watch to see if rate cuts are coming.
      • Cross: USD weakness offset by lower WTI, US-CA 10Y stable.
      • Levels: Support at 1.3580, resistance at 1.3650.
    • AUD/USD (Aussie):
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (AU): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response.
      • Cross: Copper price rise and DXY weakness, China growth hopes aiding.
      • Levels: Support at 0.7200, resistance at 0.7280.
    • NZD/USD (Kiwi):
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (NZ): RBNZ speakers in focus, impact on kiwi to be assessed.
      • Cross: DXY weakness and risk-on, limited by US yield impact.
      • Levels: Support at 0.5900, resistance at 0.6000.
    • USD/CHF (Swissy):
      • Direction: Down
      • Domestic (CH): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response.
      • Cross: DXY weakness and haven demand waning.
      • Levels: Support at 0.7770, resistance at 0.7830.
    • EUR/GBP, EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY:
      • Direction (per cross): Mixed
      • Domestic: Relative CB divergence is a driver today.
      • Cross: EUR/GBP ranges. JPY shorts are exposed.
      • Levels: Monitor key levels from overnight session.
    • XAU (Gold):
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Hopes for de-escalation are driving.
      • Cross: Weaker DXY, fading risk-off, positive momentum.
      • Levels: Support at 4650, resistance at 4700.
    • XAG (Silver):
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (asset-specific): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response.
      • Cross: Follows Gold’s trend, industrial demand boost.
      • Levels: Support at 7600, resistance at 7800.
    • WTI / Brent:
      • Direction: Down
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Deal chatter is main driver.
      • Cross: Weaker DXY isn’t sufficient to lift with Iran headlines.
      • Levels: Support at 90, resistance at 100.
    • Copper:
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (asset-specific): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response.
      • Cross: Aided by optimism.
      • Levels: Support at 610, resistance at 620.
    • SPX:
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (US): Boosted sentiment supports outlook.
      • Cross: VIX regime shift, global risk-on fueling.
      • Levels: Futures 7300, cash support at 7250, resistance at 7350.
    • NDX:
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (US): Mega-cap resilience and lower rates helpful.
      • Cross: Rate sensitivity supporting.
      • Levels: Monitor intraday resistance and support levels.
    • US30 (Dow):
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (US): Broader market lift aids cyclicals.
      • Cross: Lower yields benefit outlook.
      • Levels: Monitor intraday resistance and support levels.
    • UK100 (FTSE):
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (UK): No fresh domestic catalyst — sensitive to US response.
      • Cross: Riding the positive global wave, GBP drag offset.
      • Levels: Monitor intraday resistance and support levels.
    • DAX:
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (DE): Lower Bund yields, EU tone aiding DAX.
      • Cross: Taking cues from US tech.
      • Levels: Monitor intraday resistance and support levels.
    • Nikkei:
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (JP): JPY weakness and earnings are important.
      • Cross: Risk tone and US tech performance play a key role.
      • Levels: Monitor intraday resistance and support levels.
    • BTC:
      • Direction: Up
      • Domestic (asset-specific): ETF flow stable, and funding rate stable.
      • Cross: Risk sentiment.
      • Levels: Support at 81000, resistance at 83000.

    Positioning watch: JPY is the most crowded short (0th percentile) and Aussie is most crowded long (96th percentile), per CFTC. A dovish surprise from the Fed or a hawkish BoJ shift could trigger a significant squeeze in JPY.

    The pain trade: A surprisingly strong ADP print would reignite inflation concerns and send yields higher, triggering a sharp reversal of today’s risk-on move and hurting gold longs.

  • Yen Strength Persists; Intervention Chatter Resurfaces – Wednesday, 6 May

    Where we are: USD/JPY is currently trading at 156.19, down 1.08% on the day, and significantly off its overnight high of 157.93. The pair has broken below initial support at 157.00 and is testing lower levels following a three-day losing streak for the Yen. This level puts the pair near the low end of its intraday range of 155.05-157.93.

    What’s driving it: The Yen is strengthening on a combination of factors, with the primary driver being increased speculation of intervention by the Bank of Japan (BoJ) and Ministry of Finance (MoF) following its recent pullback. Although officials have not confirmed any intervention, the market remains highly sensitive to any signals of official support for the currency, especially given that wage data consolidates the case for one more BoJ hike this year. Adding to this, the dollar is broadly weaker, with the DXY index down 0.41% to 97.79, amplified by a sharp drop in US Treasury yields.

    • The BoJ’s last decision on March 19 saw the policy rate held at 0.50%, but Governor Ueda flagged a willingness to hike further if the outlook tracks projections.
    • Speculator positioning remains crowded short in JPY, with net non-commercial positions at -102,059 contracts (-7,599 w/w), placing it at the 0th percentile of its 52-week range, signaling a potential squeeze risk.
    • The US-JP 10Y yield spread has contracted to +185bp, as US 10Y yields have fallen to 4.353%, further supporting JPY strength.

    NY session focus: Traders will be closely watching the 08:15 ET release of the US ADP Non-Farm Employment Change, as a significant deviation from the 118K forecast could trigger further USD weakness and JPY strength. Key levels to watch on the downside for USD/JPY include 155.00 and 154.50. The current trade that’s working is short USD/JPY, while the trade that’s at risk is holding onto USD/JPY longs given the potential for further intervention and the crowded short positioning in Yen futures. The pain trade here would be a hawkish surprise from the ADP report, triggering a sharp reversal and forcing Yen shorts to cover.