Category: US30

  • Dow Futures Pressured by Surging Real Yields – Friday, 19 June

    Where we are: US30 futures are trading softer at 39,080, down 45 points on the morning as the overnight range holds tight within yesterday’s late-session parameters. This consolidates Thursday’s modest 72-point cash gain, which was capped by a late-session rates drag despite a spectacular 10.6% surge in Intel. Technically, the index remains pinned below the key 39,250 resistance level, while the 50-day moving average at 38,850 offers immediate structural support. With EU cash indices trading mixed to slightly lower, the intraday bias leans defensive ahead of the New York open.

    What’s driving it: The primary headwind for the blue-chip index is the aggressive repricing across the US Treasury curve, where the 2-year yield has jumped 15 basis points to 4.2% and the 10-year real yield has climbed to 2.23%. This restrictive rates backdrop is reinforced by a hawkish Federal Reserve holding rates steady while half of its officials project at least one more interest rate hike this year. This policy regime is forcing Wall Street to adjust to a new macro paradigm under the emerging Warsh era, even as domestic corporate tailwinds like the Intel-Apple manufacturing deal temporarily shield the index from deeper liquidation. Domestic energy sector components are also facing pressure as the decline in WTI crude to 84.65 following the US-Iran interim peace deal weighs on the index’s heavyweights.

    • Federal Reserve hawkishness is front and center as policymakers signal further tightening, driving US 10-year real yields to 2.23% (+9bp) and raising the hurdle rate for capital-intensive Dow giants.
    • A structural boost to domestic manufacturing has emerged after Intel’s 10.6% surge on news it will produce US-made chips for Apple, creating a positive divergence against interest-rate sensitive sectors.
    • Speculator positioning in the Dow remains modestly short at -2,539 contracts (3.0% of open interest), indicating that the index is spared from the risk of a crowded long liquidation if yields continue to move higher.

    NY session focus: While US cash markets are closed today for the holiday, thin-liquidity futures will react handily to the 08:30 ET data release, where a hot print risks pushing US30 futures down to key support at 38,850. Upside progress is capped below 39,250 unless we see a rapid reversal in US yields, which currently anchor the bearish intraday bias. The trade that is working is scaling into short positions on relief rallies toward 39,150, while the long-duration catch-up trade is highly at risk. The pain trade for this index is a rapid short-squeeze through 39,300 on a soft 08:30 ET print that catches under-allocated macro funds off guard.

  • NY Session Tactical Brief – Friday, 19 June

    Regime: Mixed-to-defensive; while US equities consolidate tech-led gains, the broader macro backdrop turns risk-averse as VIX jumps 12% to 18.44, propelled by a hawkish Fed repricing that pushes the DXY to 100.80.

    Today’s market themes:

    • Theme 1: **Strait of Hormuz De-escalation:** Crude slides 10% weekly as physical supply flow fears evaporate, with 80 million barrels passing the Strait.
    • Theme 2: **Hawkish Fed Repricing:** A structural bid for the greenback as US 10-year real yields climb to 2.23%, crushing non-yielding assets.
    • Theme 3: **Fiscal Scrutiny and Sovereign Strain:** UK Gilts face pressure following post-election fiscal concerns, despite a solid retail sales recovery.

    The setup: We buy USD on dips as DXY consolidates near one-year highs of 100.80, targeting 101.20 on the back of rising US real yields at 2.23%. While Nasdaq 100 futures hold near 19,850, extreme FX positioning creates asymmetric risk, making EUR/USD vulnerable to $1.1400 on ECB-Fed policy divergence. The tactical play is selling GBP/USD rallies above 1.3200, as crowded short positioning (17th percentile) is squeezed out by the retail sales beat, offering a cleaner short entry.

    Watch list (native time per event):

    • 07:00 BST GBP: Retail Sales m/m (forecast 0.5%, prior -1.3%)
    • 10:00 CET EUR: ECB’s Wunsch Speech (July interest rate guidance)
    • 08:30 ET USD: NY Cash Open & FX option expiries at 100.80 DXY strike

    Bias by asset:

    • DXY:
      • Direction: Bullish bias
      • Domestic (US): Hawkish Fed trajectory and rising US 10Y real yields to 2.23% support.
      • Cross: Outperforms G10 on safe-haven flows and wide macroeconomic growth differentials.
      • Levels: Support 100.20 / Resistance 101.20
    • EUR/USD:
      • Direction: Bearish bias
      • Domestic (EU): Dovish ECB deposit rate of 2.50% and Wunsch rate comments keep Bunds volatile.
      • Cross: Pinned near $1.1450 by relentless DXY strength and widening US-DE spreads.
      • Levels: Support $1.1400 / Resistance $1.1510
    • GBP/USD (Cable):
      • Direction: Tactically bullish
      • Domestic (UK): Solid retail sales rebound at 07:00 BST and post-election Gilt yield pressure.
      • Cross: Recovers past 1.3200 on short-squeeze potential, but capped by structural DXY demand.
      • Levels: Support 1.3150 / Resistance 1.3280
    • USD/JPY:
      • Direction: Bullish bias
      • Domestic (JP): BoJ’s ultra-loose 0.50% policy anchors yen near 40-year lows, raising intervention risk.
      • Cross: Vaults toward 161.80 as US 10Y real yield rise rewards carry trades.
      • Levels: Support 160.50 / Resistance 162.00
    • USD/CAD (Loonie):
      • Direction: Bullish bias
      • Domestic (CA): Weak crude prices drag CAD lower as BoC easing expectations intensify.
      • Cross: Testing seven-month highs near 1.4110 on broad-based US dollar dominance.
      • Levels: Support 1.4020 / Resistance 1.4150
    • AUD/USD (Aussie):
      • Direction: Bearish bias
      • Domestic (AU): Hawkish RBA pause provides minor underlying support amid falling industrial metal prices.
      • Cross: Trapped below 0.7050 on deteriorating global risk appetite and rising real yields.
      • Levels: Support 0.6980 / Resistance 0.7080
    • NZD/USD (Kiwi):
      • Direction: Bearish bias
      • Domestic (NZ): RBNZ easing bias intensifies following a weak Q1 GDP print of 0.8%.
      • Cross: Languishes near 0.5730 as global safe-haven flows favor the US dollar.
      • Levels: Support 0.5690 / Resistance 0.5780
    • USD/CHF (Swissy):
      • Direction: Bearish bias
      • Domestic (CH): SNB left rates at 0%, reinforcing active intervention bias to weaken CHF.
      • Cross: Holding near 0.8000 on safe-haven demand despite overall US dollar strength.
      • Levels: Support 0.7950 / Resistance 0.8080
    • EUR/GBP, EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY:
      • Direction (per cross): EUR/GBP bearish; EUR/JPY neutral; GBP/JPY bullish
      • Domestic: ECB’s dovish 2.50% deposit rate underperforms BoE’s cautious stance; JPY carry remains bid.
      • Cross: Sterling squeeze on retail sales drives EUR/GBP lower and GBP/JPY to fresh highs.
      • Levels: EUR/GBP 0.8420 / EUR/JPY 184.85 / GBP/JPY 213.10
    • XAU (Gold):
      • Direction: Bearish bias
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Real yields rising to 2.23% and Goldman cutting targets present heavy headwinds.
      • Cross: Plunges to $4,150/oz on persistent DXY strength and higher-for-longer Fed rates.
      • Levels: Support $4,120 / Resistance $4,210
    • XAG (Silver):
      • Direction: Bearish bias
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Softening industrial demand and extreme CFTC positioning raise downside liquidation risks.
      • Cross: Drifts lower as rising US real yields damp non-yielding metal appeal.
      • Levels: Support $28.50 / Resistance $30.20
    • WTI / Brent:
      • Direction: Bearish bias
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Hormuz supply fears ease with 80M barrels ready for transit, driving crude down.
      • Cross: Stronger DXY and slowing global growth expectations accelerate the 10% weekly rout.
      • Levels: WTI Support $75.50 / Brent Support $78.20
    • Copper:
      • Direction: Bearish bias
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Net long positioning at 92nd percentile risks severe squeeze on China demand doubts.
      • Cross: Pinned lower by stronger dollar index and global manufacturing deceleration.
      • Levels: Support $4.35 / Resistance $4.55
    • SPX:
      • Direction: Neutral consolidative
      • Domestic (US): Investors digest Thursday’s 1.0% cash rally amid high real interest rates.
      • Cross: Trading near 5,480 as VIX climbs to 18.44, signaling cautious hedging.
      • Levels: Support 5,420 / Resistance 5,510
    • NDX:
      • Direction: Neutral consolidative
      • Domestic (US): Tech consolidates near 19,850 following Thursday’s strong 1.9% cash recovery.
      • Cross: Rising real rates test high-valuation tech, cap topside near-term momentum.
      • Levels: Support 19,700 / Resistance 20,000
    • US30 (Dow):
      • Direction: Bearish bias
      • Domestic (US): Cyclical stocks under pressure on high real yields and corporate warning signals.
      • Cross: Futures compressed near 39,200 as thin holiday volumes limit directional flows.
      • Levels: Support 38,900 / Resistance 39,450
    • UK100 (FTSE):
      • Direction: Bullish bias
      • Domestic (UK): Gilt yields fall post-election, while commodity drag moderates in European trading.
      • Cross: Gains 0.3% to trade around 8,240, tracking European cash market resilience.
      • Levels: Support 8,195 / Resistance 8,310
    • DAX:
      • Direction: Neutral consolidative
      • Domestic (DE): Consolidated below 25,000 as Volkswagen’s 4% ex-dividend drop anchors the index.
      • Cross: Six-day rally pauses as rising US rates and stronger dollar weigh on sentiment.
      • Levels: Support 24,750 / Resistance 25,000
    • Nikkei:
      • Direction: Bullish bias
      • Domestic (JP): Steady core inflation at 1.4% and weak yen fuel exporters, index trades 71,250.
      • Cross: Closed up 0.28%, locking in an 8% weekly gain on US tech spillover.
      • Levels: Support 70,500 / Resistance 72,000
    • BTC:
      • Direction: Bearish bias
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Spot ETF inflows pause and elevated funding rates create near-term deleveraging risk.
      • Cross: Consolidation near $66,420 after overnight slide; highly vulnerable to rising real yields.
      • Levels: Support $65,500 / Resistance $67,150

    Positioning watch: Speculator positioning is heavily asymmetrical, with crowded USD net longs (81st percentile) and Bitcoin longs (98th percentile) vulnerable to a squeeze, while the Japanese Yen (0th percentile) and British Pound (17th percentile) shorts are ripe for sudden squeeze-driven rallies on domestic data surprises.

    The pain trade: A sharp contraction in US real yields triggering a massive squeeze of crowded Japanese Yen and British Pound shorts.

  • NY Session Tactical Brief – Friday, 19 June

    Regime: The global risk regime is firmly risk-off as a hawkish shift in US real rates—with 10-year TIPS rising to 2.23%—and a jump in the VIX to 18.44 fuel broad dollar strength and pressure global equity complexes.

    Today’s market themes:

    • Theme 1: Structural real-rate repricing squeezing global asset valuations and driving a third weekly decline in gold.
    • Theme 2: Geopolitical risk premium mitigation as Strait of Hormuz physical shipping flows show signs of normalization.
    • Theme 3: High-stakes currency intervention watch as USD/JPY hovers at 161.45 and the Yen teeters near 40-year lows.

    The setup: We are entering the New York crossover structurally long the US Dollar against low-yielding peers, targeting a sustained break higher in USD/JPY past 161.70 and EUR/USD down toward $1.1400. The near-term execution risk is a unilateral MoF intervention in Tokyo or an unexpected cooling in US yields, which would trigger immediate, massive short-covering across crowded Sterling and Yen shorts. We recommend selling any intraday gold rallies toward $4,165 as the rise in US 10-year real yields to 2.23% creates an institutional headwind that offsets recent safe-haven bids.

    Watch list (native time per event):

    • 07:00 BST – GBP: Retail Sales m/m (Forecast: 0.5%, Prior: -1.3%)
    • 15:30 ET – USD: CFTC Weekly Positioning Update
    • 18:00 CET – EUR: ECB’s Wunsch Speech on policy outlook

    Bias by asset:

    • DXY:
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (US): Hawkish Fed stance and US 2Y yield surge to 4.2% support USD.
      • Cross: Safe-haven flows support DXY as European equities pause and commodity complexes tumble.
      • Levels: Support 100.50 / Resistance 101.20
    • EUR/USD:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (EU): ECB dovish policy and rising Bund yields on fiscal concerns dominate trade.
      • Cross: Firm US dollar and high US real yields keep spot near 1.1450.
      • Levels: Support 1.1400 / Resistance 1.1510
    • GBP/USD (Cable):
      • Direction: Tactically Bullish
      • Domestic (UK): Strong Retail Sales and sticky core CPI at 2.6% delay rate cuts.
      • Cross: DXY demand caps gains but massive short positioning at 17%ile limits downside.
      • Levels: Support 1.3150 / Resistance 1.3280
    • USD/JPY:
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (JP): MoF intervention threat intensifies as BoJ keeps rates pegged at 0.50%.
      • Cross: Wider yield spreads after 10Y US Treasury yields climb to 4.49% support.
      • Levels: Support 161.00 / Resistance 161.70
    • USD/CAD (Loonie):
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (CA): Cooling domestic inflation supports BoC easing bias, weakening the local currency.
      • Cross: High US yields and softer crude prices below 77 press USDCAD higher.
      • Levels: Support 1.4050 / Resistance 1.4115
    • AUD/USD (Aussie):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (AU): Markets price out RBA hikes as copper-iron-ore complex faces downside pressure.
      • Cross: Strong DXY and softer China demand keep Aussie under the 0.7050 level.
      • Levels: Support 0.7000 / Resistance 0.7100
    • NZD/USD (Kiwi):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (NZ): RBNZ active easing bias following Q1 GDP miss of 0.8% pressures Kiwi.
      • Cross: Firm DXY and rising US real yields depress commodity currencies globally.
      • Levels: Support 0.5700 / Resistance 0.5780
    • USD/CHF (Swissy):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (CH): Safe-haven Swiss Franc demand surges on canceled Obbürgen peace talks.
      • Cross: Broad DXY strength limits Swissy downside, forcing test of 0.8000 support.
      • Levels: Support 0.7980 / Resistance 0.8080
    • EUR/GBP, EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY:
      • Direction (per cross): EUR/GBP Bearish, EUR/JPY Bearish, GBP/JPY Bullish
      • Domestic: Divergent policy as ECB trims rates while BoE remains on hold.
      • Cross: Sterling short-covering and JPY weakness dominate global cross-of-crosses flows.
      • Levels: EUR/GBP Support 0.8500 / GBP/JPY Resistance 214.00
    • XAU (Gold):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Widespread gold ETF outflows and lowered broker price targets trigger liquidations.
      • Cross: Strong DXY and hawkish Fed signals cement gold’s weekly decline.
      • Levels: Support 4120 / Resistance 4180
    • XAG (Silver):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Softening industrial metals demand and rising Gold-Silver ratio weigh on silver.
      • Cross: Rising US yields and firm DXY prompt tactical liquidations in metals.
      • Levels: Support 28.50 / Resistance 30.20
    • WTI / Brent:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Strait of Hormuz physical shipping flows normalize as oil tankers resume transit.
      • Cross: Strong DXY and global economic growth concerns cap energy market upside.
      • Levels: WTI Support 75.50 / Brent Resistance 81.00
    • Copper:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Rising LME inventories and underwhelming Chinese industrial growth weigh on copper.
      • Cross: Crowded long CFTC positioning at 92%ile leaves copper vulnerable to DXY.
      • Levels: Support 4.30 / Resistance 4.65
    • SPX:
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (US): Mega-cap tech consolidation ahead of the weekend limits cash market gains.
      • Cross: Jump in VIX to 18.44 signals rising short-term downside volatility.
      • Levels: Futures Support 5,450 / Resistance 5,520
    • NDX:
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (US): Corporate growth warnings and software demand worries limit gains.
      • Cross: Tech sensitivity to US 10Y yield at 4.49% keeps upside capped.
      • Levels: Futures Support 19,800 / Resistance 20,050
    • US30 (Dow):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (US): Industrial and cyclical growth downgrades pressure large-cap index.
      • Cross: Higher US 2-year yield of 4.2% curbs industrial stock appeal.
      • Levels: Futures Support 38,950 / Resistance 39,250
    • UK100 (FTSE):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (UK): Higher Gilt yields on persistent fiscal worries weigh on domestic shares.
      • Cross: Softening energy prices drag commodity-heavy index as crude prices drop.
      • Levels: Spot Support 8,150 / Resistance 8,250
    • DAX:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (DE): Heavy Volkswagen ex-dividend drop of 4% drags German shares down.
      • Cross: Weak US tech sentiment and rising dollar offset upgraded regional targets.
      • Levels: Spot Support 24,800 / Resistance 25,100
    • Nikkei:
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (JP): May core CPI printing at 1.4% supports corporate profit recovery.
      • Cross: Yen trading near 161.45 boosts export revenues and attracts foreign buyers.
      • Levels: Spot Support 70,800 / Resistance 72,000
    • BTC:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Lower futures funding rates and cooling spot ETF flows drag BTC.
      • Cross: Crowded longs at 98%ile are highly sensitive to rising US rates.
      • Levels: Spot Support 64,000 / Resistance 65,500

    Positioning watch: CFTC data highlights extreme structural vulnerability with speculators heavily net short the Japanese Yen (0%ile), S&P 500 (6%ile), and British Pound (17%ile), while net long Bitcoin (98%ile) and Copper (92%ile). This extreme skew leaves crowded USD and commodity longs highly vulnerable to rapid liquidation, while raising the threat of explosive short-covering rallies across G10 currencies and US equity futures on any dovish macro deviation.

    The pain trade: The ultimate pain trade today would be a coordinated G7 currency intervention to support the Yen alongside a sharp retracement in US Treasury yields, which would trigger a violent, multi-figure short-squeeze across GBP, JPY, and global equity indices.

  • Rates Pressure Dow Futures in Thin Holiday Trade – Friday, 19 June

    Where we are: Dow Jones futures are trading in a tightly compressed range near 39,200 as thin holiday volumes cap directional momentum. This overnight consolidation follows Thursday’s cash close where the index posted a modest 72-point gain, significantly lagging the tech-heavy benchmarks as higher sovereign yields weighed on blue chips. Technically, the index is hovering just beneath its 50-day moving average, with key support at the 39,000 psychological handle remaining the primary line of defense for bulls. Without US cash equity participation today, futures are vulnerable to erratic, liquidity-driven sweeps within the established 39,000 to 39,350 range.

    What’s driving it: The primary weight on blue-chip equities is the hawkish repricing of the Federal Reserve’s path under the emerging Warsh era, which is forcing Wall Street to do the heavy lifting of tightening financial conditions. Treasury yields have adjusted violently to this hawkish backdrop, with the US 2-year yield surging 15 basis points to 4.2% and the 10-year real yield climbing 9 basis points to 2.23%, exerting direct valuation pressure on high-duration industrial and financial components. While the interim US-Iran peace agreement and the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz have pulled WTI crude down 4.48% to $84.65 to ease input cost concerns, the broader equity risk appetite remains constrained by the Fed’s stance where half of the officials still project another rate hike this year.

    • The hawkish shift in Fed policy expectations, backed by the 15-basis-point surge in the US 2-year yield to 4.2%, which is actively dismantling the soft-landing equity valuation premium.
    • Trump’s domestic manufacturing push, highlighted by Intel’s 10.6% surge following the announcement that the semiconductor giant will produce chips for Apple in the US, providing a localized boost to domestic industrial sentiment.
    • A clean positioning landscape, with CFTC speculative net non-commercial contracts at a modest short of -2,539 (representing just -3.0% of open interest), which limits the threat of an immediate capitulation squeeze but leaves the index exposed to low-liquidity cascading sell stops.

    NY session focus: With Wall Street cash equity markets closed for the Juneteenth holiday, the focus during the shortened futures session ending at 13:00 ET will be on execution liquidity and any reaction to the scheduled 08:30 ET data prints. Key levels to monitor are yesterday’s high of 39,150 on the upside, while a clean break below 39,000 will open the door for systematic CTA accounts to target the 200-day moving average down at 38,750. The trade that is working is shorting the cyclical Dow components against tech hedges, while the trade at risk is buying breakout attempts in a holiday-depleted order book. The pain trade for the Dow is a sudden, liquidity-thin drop below 38,900 that forces systematic trend-followers to dump their remaining long exposure into a vacuum.

  • NY Session Tactical Brief – Friday, 19 June

    Regime: Risk-off flows are dominating the macro landscape as a sharp 12.37% spike in the VIX to 18.44 and rising US 10-year real yields to 2.23% trigger defensive positioning across G10 assets.

    Today’s market themes:

    • Theme 1: Heavy speculation on a Japanese Ministry of Finance FX intervention as USD/JPY hovers precariously at 161.45.
    • Theme 2: Rapid unwinding of the geopolitical risk premium in crude oil, driving WTI toward a 10% weekly decline.
    • Theme 3: Global policy divergence as hawkish Fed hold signals contrast with an active SNB and a dovish RBNZ stance.

    The setup: The primary tactical trade is fading G10 commodity currencies against the US Dollar as high US real yields at 2.23% restrict capital flows to risk assets. High-beta FX remains highly vulnerable to this rate-repricing, particularly with the Canadian Dollar testing seven-month lows at 1.4100 and the Kiwi collapsing to 0.5730. We are holding long DXY positions, targeting 101.30, while running tight trailing stops on USD/JPY longs given the elevated threat of immediate Tokyo intervention.

    Watch list (native time per event):

    • 07:00 BST – GBP: Retail Sales m/m (forecast 0.5%, prior -1.3%)
    • 14:00 CET – EUR: ECB’s Wunsch Speaks on Policy Outlook
    • 13:00 ET – USD: Fed Policy Speakers and NY Cash Close Flows

    Bias by asset:

    • DXY:
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (US): Hawkish Fed signals and rising US 10Y real yields to 2.23% support DXY.
      • Cross: Squeezes risk-sensitive G10 peers as global equity markets show vulnerability to higher-for-longer.
      • Levels: Support 100.20 / Resistance 101.30
    • EUR/USD:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (EU): ECB Wunsch keeps July hike alive; Eurozone inflation anchors firmly near 2.0% target.
      • Cross: Rising DXY and US-DE 10Y yield spreads crush Euro recovery attempts.
      • Levels: Support 1.1400 / Resistance 1.1500
    • GBP/USD (Cable):
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (UK): Core CPI ticking up to 2.6% supports BoE’s cautious 8-1 hold stance.
      • Cross: Rising DXY and weak risk sentiment cap Cable’s recovery attempts near 1.3200.
      • Levels: Support 1.3150 / Resistance 1.3260
    • USD/JPY:
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (JP): Core CPI at 1.4%; BoJ eyes gradual hikes but JGB yields lag.
      • Cross: Squeezed by US 10Y yields at 4.49%; high intervention risk near 161.80.
      • Levels: Support 160.50 / Resistance 162.00
    • USD/CAD (Loonie):
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (CA): Fading domestic growth and sliding crude prices drag on Canadian Dollar sentiment.
      • Cross: Strong DXY and wide US-CA 10Y spread drive pair to 1.4100.
      • Levels: Support 1.4020 / Resistance 1.4150
    • AUD/USD (Aussie):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (AU): Fading domestic rate-hike expectations and softening iron ore prices drag.
      • Cross: Rising DXY and weak global commodity demand pull Aussie below 0.7050.
      • Levels: Support 0.7000 / Resistance 0.7110
    • NZD/USD (Kiwi):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (NZ): RBNZ easing bias following soft Q1 GDP of 0.8% weighs heavily.
      • Cross: Broad DXY strength drags the Kiwi down to two-month lows of 0.5730.
      • Levels: Support 0.5700 / Resistance 0.5810
    • USD/CHF (Swissy):
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (CH): SNB holds rate at 0% while threatening foreign exchange intervention.
      • Cross: Safe-haven demand offset by dominant DXY keeps pair testing 0.8000.
      • Levels: Support 0.7950 / Resistance 0.8050
    • EUR/GBP, EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY:
      • Direction (per cross): EUR/GBP Bearish, EUR/JPY Bearish, GBP/JPY Bullish
      • Domestic: Wide 200bp policy gap anchors EUR/GBP; sticky UK inflation supports GBP legs.
      • Cross: Strong USD limits EUR upside; high intervention risks cap gains against JPY.
      • Levels: EUR/GBP Support 0.8400 / Resistance 0.8550
    • XAU (Gold):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Central bank purchases steady, but rising global real yields increase opportunity cost.
      • Cross: Goldman Sachs target cut and strong DXY push spot gold toward $4,150.
      • Levels: Support 4120 / Resistance 4190
    • XAG (Silver):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Softening industrial demand expectations outweigh tight physical market dynamics.
      • Cross: Pinned lower by a dominant DXY and rising global real yields.
      • Levels: Support 28.50 / Resistance 31.00
    • WTI / Brent:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Crashing geopolitical premium and easing Middle East supply fears press WTI to $77.
      • Cross: Strong DXY and rising risk-off sentiment accelerate the 10% weekly rout.
      • Levels: Support 75.50 / Resistance 79.00
    • Copper:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Sluggish China demand expectations and rising LME inventories keep pricing heavy.
      • Cross: Vulnerable to a broad DXY surge and global growth-related risk-off flows.
      • Levels: Support 4.10 / Resistance 4.35
    • SPX:
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (US): Consolidating above 50-day moving average after yesterday’s 1% cash session rally.
      • Cross: VIX rising to 18.44 prompts cautious positioning but tech bid remains intact.
      • Levels: Support 5450 / Resistance 5520
    • NDX:
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (US): Strong tech consolidation around 19,920 following yesterday’s powerful 1.9% rally.
      • Cross: High rate sensitivity tested by rising US 10Y real yields at 2.23%.
      • Levels: Support 19800 / Resistance 20100
    • US30 (Dow):
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (US): Cyclicals under pressure as higher-for-longer rate signals limit industrial sector upside.
      • Cross: Shrugs off equity tech rally as bond-yield volatility keeps buyers sidelined.
      • Levels: Support 38900 / Resistance 39300
    • UK100 (FTSE):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (UK): Dragged lower by a falling commodity sector and rising Gilt yield concerns.
      • Cross: Vulnerable to broader European equity softness despite a minor morning recovery.
      • Levels: Support 8100 / Resistance 8250
    • DAX:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (DE): Pausing below 25,000 handle as Eurozone inflation anchors firmly at 2.0%.
      • Cross: Tech sector strength fails to lift cyclicals amid rising broad sovereign yields.
      • Levels: Support 24700 / Resistance 25100
    • Nikkei:
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (JP): Locked in 8% weekly gain supported by stable inflation at 1.4%.
      • Cross: Japanese exporters highly favored due to extreme weakness in yen spot pricing.
      • Levels: Support 70500 / Resistance 72000
    • BTC:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Pinned near $66,150; neutral ETF flows fail to offset spot selling.
      • Cross: Heavily correlated with Nasdaq but pressured by rising real US Treasury yields.
      • Levels: Support 65000 / Resistance 67500

    Positioning watch: Speculators are highly exposed to a squeeze with crowded long positioning in Bitcoin (98th percentile) and Copper (92nd percentile) alongside crowded short positioning in the Yen (0th percentile) and S&P 500 (6th percentile). Any unexpected shift in risk sentiment or direct currency intervention poses a severe risk of a violent short squeeze in these assets.

    The pain trade: A coordinated FX intervention by the Ministry of Finance to strengthen the Yen would trigger a catastrophic liquidation of the crowded USD/JPY long carry trade, dragging down DXY and global yields.

  • Dow Braces for Warsh Era Rate Pressures – Friday, 19 June

    Where we are: US30 futures are hovering around the 39,120 mark, consolidating yesterday’s modest 72-point cash gain in quiet, pre-holiday trade. The overnight range has been exceptionally tight, bounded by 39,050 and 39,200, as traders manage thin liquidity with US cash markets closed today. This leaves the index sitting comfortably above its 50-day moving average but well below the recent record highs. European cash markets are currently printing flat, giving US futures little in the way of a directional lead before the NY open.

    What’s driving it: The Federal Reserve’s newly minted “Warsh era” is forcing Wall Street to reprice the path of US monetary policy, with US 2-year yields jumping 15 basis points to 4.2% and the 10-year yield settling at 4.49%. This hawkish backdrop, where half of Fed officials still favor another rate hike this year, is capping the Dow’s upside despite the relief of a US-Iran interim peace deal. This geopolitical detente has reopened the Strait of Hormuz, driving a sharp 4.48% decline in WTI crude to $84.65 and shifting the index’s internal dynamics. Meanwhile, the domestic tech-manufacturing boost—led by Intel’s deal to build Apple chips in the US—is keeping a solid floor under the broader market even as real yields grind higher.

    • The sharp 15.0bp spike in the US 2Y yield to 4.2% and a 9.0bp rise in 10Y real yields to 2.23% have tightened financial conditions, directly pressuring high-dividend Dow industrials.
    • WTI Crude’s slide to $84.65 has triggered a stark divergence within the Dow, throwing a lifeline to transport and consumer-discretionary stocks while dragging heavily on major oil constituents.
    • CFTC positioning data shows speculators are holding a clean, modest short position of -2,539 contracts (56th percentile), suggesting the index lacks the heavy long overhang that typically fuels panic-driven liquidations in thin liquidity.

    NY session focus: With US cash equity markets closed for the holiday, the NY session focus will center on late futures flows around the 08:30 ET data window and any early headlines ahead of the weekend. Key technical support sits at 39,000, while a break above 39,300 is required to spark any meaningful momentum. The trade that is working is a defensive rotation into domestic-focused manufacturing names on the back of recent supply-chain reshoring announcements, while the trade at risk is chasing energy-sensitive industrial plays. The pain trade for the Dow is a sudden, liquidity-thin squeeze back toward 39,500 if treasury yields reverse yesterday’s aggressive moves.

  • US30 Under Pressure as Bond Yields Spike – Friday, 19 June

    Where we are: US30 futures are consolidating near 39,120 during the London morning, maintaining a tight overnight range between 39,050 and 39,180. This follows Thursday’s cash session where the Dow Jones clawed back a modest 72-point gain, buoyed by domestic chipmaker strength despite broader macro headwinds. Technically, the index remains pinned below major overhead resistance at 39,300, while the 50-day moving average near 38,950 provides the immediate floor. Trading desks are bracing for a highly headline-driven session as US futures trade through a partial holiday schedule with thinned liquidity.

    What’s driving it: The dominant market driver is the aggressive upward repricing across the US Treasury curve, where the two-year yield has surged 15 basis points to 4.2% and real 10-year yields have climbed to 2.23%. This yield spike reflects a structural shift under the new ‘Warsh era’ at the Federal Reserve, where policymakers are forcing Wall Street to do the heavy lifting of monetary tightening. While a massive 10.6% surge in Intel and the easing of energy-price concerns via the US-Iran peace deal have cushioned the blue-chip index, the hawkishness of a Fed where half of the officials still favor another rate hike is capping equity valuations. This macro tension is further compounded by a rising VIX, which jumped 12.37% to 18.44, signaling that volatility is returning to the equity space.

    • The Fed Policy Shift: The transition to the Warsh era has ushered in a highly hawkish policy stance, with half of the committee signaling at least one more rate increase this year, driving the US 10-year yield up 6 basis points to 4.49%.
    • Intel-Apple Semiconductor Deal: The domestic corporate backdrop is anchored by Intel’s 10.6% surge following the announcement that it will manufacture chips for Apple domestically, a structural boost that has insulated Dow tech components.
    • Light Speculator Positioning: CFTC data shows net non-commercial contracts are only modestly short at -2,539 (56th percentile of open interest), meaning there is no massive short-squeeze cushion to prevent a cascade if support levels break.

    NY session focus: The trading session will hinge on the market’s digestion of any pre-market macro releases leading up to the 08:30 ET print, which could trigger outsized moves in thin holiday conditions. We expect solid resistance to hold at 39,300, and the trade that is working is selling intraday rallies toward 39,250 to target a test of the 50-day moving average at 38,950. The trade at risk is chasing late-day breakouts in either direction as volumes dry up ahead of the weekend. The pain trade for this asset is a rapid squeeze back toward 39,500 if Treasury yields suddenly reverse their weekly gains.

  • NY Session Tactical Brief – Friday, 19 June

    Regime: Risk-off leaning mixed, as an elevated VIX at 18.44 and high US real yields at 2.23% suppress global equity upside and squeeze commodity markets.

    Today’s market themes:

    • Theme 1: Real-rate shock as US 10-year TIPS yields leap to 2.23%, driving broad-based liquidations in gold and tech.
    • Theme 2: Energy premium collapse as physical oil flows resume inside the Strait of Hormuz, knocking Brent below $80.
    • Theme 3: MoF intervention threat looming large as USD/JPY consolidates on the precipice of multi-decade highs at 161.45.

    The setup: The dominant cross-asset driver is the relentless bid under the US Dollar, powered by a hawkish Fed repricing that has pushed 2-year yields to 4.20% and 10-year real yields to a restrictive 2.23%. We lean long DXY targeting 101.20, funded by short gold positions as spot plunges to $4,150/oz on slashed institutional targets and real-rate headwinds. The key risk to this playbook is a sharp, unannounced FX intervention by the Bank of Japan/Ministry of Finance if USD/JPY breaches 161.80, which would temporarily trigger a violent risk-off squeeze across all dollar-crosses.

    Watch list (native time per event):

    • 07:00 BST GBP: Retail Sales m/m (forecast 0.5%, prior -1.3%)
    • 13:00 EDT US: Baker Hughes Rig Count (prior 590)

    Bias by asset:

    • DXY:
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (US): Hawkish Fed signals drive 2Y yields to 4.2% and DXY to one-year highs.
      • Cross: Safe-haven flows support dollar as geopolitical oil risk and equity momentum fade.
      • Levels: Support 100.40 / Resistance 101.20
    • EUR/USD:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (EU): ECB maintains active easing bias with June HICP prints meeting 2.0% target.
      • Cross: Rising US-DE 10Y yield spreads weigh heavily on the pair near $1.1450.
      • Levels: Support $1.1400 / Resistance $1.1510
    • GBP/USD (Cable):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (UK): Core CPI at 2.6% and strong 0.7% retail sales limit downside.
      • Cross: Dominated by broad USD bid pushing Cable to defend key 1.3180 support.
      • Levels: Support 1.3180 / Resistance 1.3250
    • USD/JPY:
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (JP): Core inflation steady at 1.4%; markets alert for active MoF FX intervention.
      • Cross: Supported by 10Y US Treasury yields holding firmly at 4.49%.
      • Levels: Support 161.00 / Resistance 161.80
    • USD/CAD (Loonie):
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (CA): Weakness stems from BoC easing bias and sliding domestic energy export values.
      • Cross: Strong DXY and falling crude push pair toward key 1.4150 resistance.
      • Levels: Support 1.4020 / Resistance 1.4150
    • AUD/USD (Aussie):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (AU): Domestic pricing capitulates on any remaining RBA rate hike premium.
      • Cross: Vulnerable to DXY strength and heavy copper positioning unwinding below 0.7050.
      • Levels: Support 0.7000 / Resistance 0.7080
    • NZD/USD (Kiwi):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (NZ): Heavily weighed by RBNZ’s 25bp cut to 3.50% and easing bias.
      • Cross: Weak risk sentiment and DXY strength pin Kiwi near 0.5730 lows.
      • Levels: Support 0.5700 / Resistance 0.5780
    • USD/CHF (Swissy):
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (CH): SNB holds policy rate at 0% with active FX intervention warnings.
      • Cross: Safe-haven flows fail to counter robust DXY demand near 0.8900.
      • Levels: Support 0.8850 / Resistance 0.8950
    • EUR/GBP, EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY:
      • Direction (per cross): EUR/GBP bearish, EUR/JPY bearish, GBP/JPY bullish
      • Domestic: ECB easing bias contrasts with sticky BoE inflation and slow BoJ normalization.
      • Cross: GBP outperformance in crosses driven by solid domestic yields versus global peers.
      • Levels: EUR/GBP support 0.8620, GBP/JPY resistance 203.00
    • XAU (Gold):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Global real yields surging to 2.23% act as a massive structural drag.
      • Cross: Broad DXY strength and Goldman targets cut drag spot toward $4,120.
      • Levels: Support $4,120 / Resistance $4,200
    • XAG (Silver):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Softening industrial demand signals and elevated gold-silver ratio weigh on price action.
      • Cross: Under pressure from a strong USD and general metal liquidation.
      • Levels: Support $28.50 / Resistance $30.20
    • WTI / Brent:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Geopolitical supply premiums evaporate as physical transit inside Hormuz resumes smoothly.
      • Cross: Strengthened DXY exacerbates crude’s steep 10% weekly liquidation.
      • Levels: Brent support $79.00 / WTI resistance $78.50
    • Copper:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): China inventory builds weigh as LME warehouse stocks continue to climb.
      • Cross: Crowded speculative longs vulnerable to liquidation as global growth concerns mount.
      • Levels: Support $4.30 / Resistance $4.55
    • SPX:
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (US): Strong earnings forecasts match hawkish Fed signals, consolidating near 5,435.
      • Cross: Elevated VIX at 18.44 keeps upside capped ahead of weekend.
      • Levels: Futures support 5,415 / resistance 5,450
    • NDX:
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (US): Real rate headwinds at 2.23% counter long-term generative AI investment flows.
      • Cross: Nasdaq futures consolidate near 19,940 on high rates sensitivity.
      • Levels: Support 19,850 / Resistance 20,050
    • US30 (Dow):
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (US): Cyclical stocks digest recent yields spike ahead of upcoming quarterly earnings.
      • Cross: Modest cash gains consolidate as US bond yields show signs of peak.
      • Levels: Support 38,950 / Resistance 39,300
    • UK100 (FTSE):
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (UK): Sticky inflation and Gilt yields pressure heavyweight mining and energy stocks.
      • Cross: Stronger Sterling and commodity drop cap FTSE recovery near 8,240.
      • Levels: Support 8,200 / Resistance 8,310
    • DAX:
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (DE): Eurozone CPI meeting 2.0% target limits further ECB rate-cut premiums.
      • Cross: Consolidating below 25,000 as Wall Street futures trade in tight ranges.
      • Levels: Support 24,800 / Resistance 25,150
    • Nikkei:
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (JP): Weak Yen boosts export outlook; core inflation steady at 1.4%.
      • Cross: Global tech sector stabilization drives Nikkei’s 8% weekly run.
      • Levels: Support 70,800 / Resistance 71,500
    • BTC:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Spot ETF inflows stall as highly crowded speculative longs face unwinding.
      • Cross: High rate environment and strong DXY push BTC below $65,450.
      • Levels: Support $64,800 / Resistance $66,200

    Positioning watch: Speculative positioning is highly stretched, with Bitcoin longs at the 98th percentile and Copper longs at the 92nd percentile, leaving both vulnerable to aggressive liquidation on any further US real-rate spikes. Conversely, deep shorts in Japanese Yen at the 0th percentile and British Pound at the 17th percentile risk violent short-covering squeezes on any sudden hawkish shifts or FX interventions.

    The pain trade: A sudden, unannounced FX intervention by the Ministry of Finance to defend the Yen at 161.80, triggering a sweeping liquidation of crowded USD longs and a violent squeeze on crowded short JPY/GBP positions.

  • Hawkish Fed Stance Keeps Dow Futures Cautious – Friday, 19 June

    Where we are: Dow Jones futures are trading steady around the 39,130 level in London, consolidating yesterday’s modest 72-point cash gain. The overnight range has been tightly confined between 39,080 and 39,180, as European desks trade with thin volumes and look ahead to the US open. Technically, the index remains pinned below its 50-day moving average, struggling to build clean momentum despite tech-led buoyancy in the broader cash indices. With US cash equity markets closed today for the holiday, thin liquidity in the futures market is amplifying sensitivity to any tick-moves in fixed income.

    What’s driving it: The domestic setup is dominated by a hawkish shift at the Federal Reserve, where policymakers held rates steady but saw half of the committee signal at least one more rate increase this year. This “Warsh era” is forcing a repricing across the US curve, with the two-year yield surging 15 basis points to 4.2% and the 10-year yield climbing 6 basis points to 4.49%. This higher-for-longer outlook acts as a direct anchor on the industrial and financial heavyweights of the blue-chip index, offsetting the geopolitical relief from the US-Iran interim peace agreement. Lower energy prices, with WTI crude sliding 4.48% to $84.65 per barrel, provide some margin relief for transport and industrial constituents, but the structural drag of rising real yields remains the dominant force.

    • The sharp steepening in the US Treasury curve, led by a 15 basis point surge in the two-year yield to 4.2%, directly pressures interest-sensitive Dow components while real yields climb 9 basis points to 2.23%.
    • A dramatic 4.48% drop in WTI crude to $84.65 following the US-Iran interim peace deal has temporarily capped cost-push inflation fears, boosting airlines and logistics.
    • Speculator positioning remains a non-event for capitulation trades, with net non-commercial contracts sitting at a modest short of -2,539 (56th percentile), leaving the index highly vulnerable to fundamental macro prints rather than a positioning squeeze.

    NY session focus: The upcoming 08:30 ET macro data release will test the resilience of the yield backup ahead of the thin-liquidity afternoon. Key levels to watch on the US30 include yesterday’s high of 39,240, where selling pressure is expected to cluster, while a break below the 39,000 support level could trigger a quick cascade toward 38,850. The trade that is working is shorting cyclical Dow components against tech, while the risk-on momentum trade is vulnerable to any further hawkish Fed commentary. The pain trade is a sustained break above 39,300 that forces systematic trend-followers to cover their short positions in an illiquid holiday session.

  • NY Session Tactical Brief – Thursday, 18 June

    Regime: Mixed risk-on, as an interim US-Iran peace agreement to reopen the Strait of Hormuz drives a historic 4.48% plunge in crude oil, offsetting hawkish post-FOMC anxieties and lifting global equities.

    Today’s market themes:

    • Theme 1: Geopolitical de-escalation in the Middle East unlocking massive supply and triggering a crude market capitulation.
    • Theme 2: Central bank divergence as the Bank of England delivers a hawkish-leaning 8-1 hold at 3.75%, while the Swiss National Bank stands pat at 0.00%.
    • Theme 3: Yield relief across major curves as US 10-year Treasuries recover to 4.43%, stabilizing equity valuations.

    The setup: The structural collapse in crude (WTI below $75) fundamentally reshapes the near-term inflation outlook, giving central banks room to breathe despite hawkish Fed rhetoric. Global equities are eagerly buying the relief, with the DAX clearing 25,000 and the Nikkei hitting a record 71,053. The tactical play is shorting energy-heavy indices like the FTSE 100 (down 1.1% near 8,150) against tech-heavy exposure, while monitoring USD/JPY at 161.10 for intervention risks.

    Watch list (native time per event):

    • 09:30 CET: CHF SNB Policy Rate Assessment (forecast 0.00%, prior 0.00%)
    • 10:00 CET: CHF SNB Press Conference
    • 12:00 BST: GBP MPC Official Bank Rate Votes (forecast 1-0-8, prior 1-0-8) and Rate Decision

    Bias by asset:

    • DXY:
      • Direction: Bullish bias
      • Domestic (US): Hawkish Fed stance limits downside despite minor yield pullback to 4.43%.
      • Cross: Supported by heavy EUR/USD and safe-haven demand unwinding elsewhere.
      • Levels: Support 100.2 / Resistance 101.1
    • EUR/USD:
      • Direction: Bearish bias
      • Domestic (EU): ECB wage tracker supports policy easing path toward further depo rate cuts.
      • Cross: Pinned below 1.1500 as DXY consolidates near multi-month highs.
      • Levels: Support 1.1450 / Resistance 1.1520
    • GBP/USD (Cable):
      • Direction: Bearish bias
      • Domestic (UK): BoE holds rate at 3.75% but fails to provide hawkish pivot.
      • Cross: Plunging toward 1.3205 as DXY strength dominates currency flows.
      • Levels: Support 1.3180 / Resistance 1.3280
    • USD/JPY:
      • Direction: Bearish bias
      • Domestic (JP): Market highly sensitive to BoJ intervention threat as JGB yields remain capped.
      • Cross: Pulled lower by softening US 10Y yield down to 4.43%.
      • Levels: Support 160.50 / Resistance 161.80
    • USD/CAD (Loonie):
      • Direction: Bullish bias
      • Domestic (CA): Direct vulnerability to crashing WTI crude prices below $75.
      • Cross: Driven higher as DXY strength exposes CAD’s heavy spec short positioning.
      • Levels: Support 1.4050 / Resistance 1.4150
    • AUD/USD (Aussie):
      • Direction: Bullish bias
      • Domestic (AU): RBA remains highly hawkish due to stubborn services inflation.
      • Cross: Firm above 0.7000, supported by resilient global equity sentiment.
      • Levels: Support 0.6970 / Resistance 0.7050
    • NZD/USD (Kiwi):
      • Direction: Bearish bias
      • Domestic (NZ): RBNZ active easing bias and 3.50% OCR anchor domestic yields.
      • Cross: Struggling near 0.578 as DXY dominance caps commodity currencies.
      • Levels: Support 0.5750 / Resistance 0.5820
    • USD/CHF (Swissy):
      • Direction: Bullish bias
      • Domestic (CH): SNB keeps policy rate at 0.00% to combat disinflationary pressure.
      • Cross: Safe-haven unwinding boosts USD/CHF toward two-month highs.
      • Levels: Support 0.8850 / Resistance 0.8980
    • EUR/GBP, EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY:
      • Direction (per cross): EUR/GBP Bearish, EUR/JPY Bearish, GBP/JPY Bullish
      • Domestic: BoE 8-1 hold contrasts with dovish ECB and capped JGB yields.
      • Cross: Risk-on sentiment favors GBP legs over low-yielding euro and yen.
      • Levels: EUR/GBP support 0.8420, GBP/JPY resistance 204.00
    • XAU (Gold):
      • Direction: Bullish bias
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Falling real yields and active central bank accumulation provide strong underlying support.
      • Cross: Reclaims $4,300 handle as peace deal counters hawkish Fed.
      • Levels: Support $4,280 / Resistance $4,330
    • XAG (Silver):
      • Direction: Bullish bias
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Strong industrial demand expectations cushion downside despite high gold-silver ratio.
      • Cross: Tracking broader gold surge and general asset-market risk-on tone.
      • Levels: Support $28.50 / Resistance $30.20
    • WTI / Brent:
      • Direction: Bearish bias
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Reopening of Strait of Hormuz releases massive wave of supply.
      • Cross: Plunging over 4.4% on de-escalation regardless of DXY strength.
      • Levels: Brent support $77.00, WTI resistance $76.50
    • Copper:
      • Direction: Bearish bias
      • Domestic (asset-specific): High LME inventory levels and weak immediate industrial physical buying.
      • Cross: Squeeze risk high for crowded long position (92nd percentile).
      • Levels: Support $4.30 / Resistance $4.65
    • SPX:
      • Direction: Bullish bias
      • Domestic (US): Yield retreat to 4.43% eases pressure on equity valuations.
      • Cross: Futures up 0.7% as Middle East peace optimism drives flows.
      • Levels: Futures 5,480 / Cash support 5,420
    • NDX:
      • Direction: Bullish bias
      • Domestic (US): Mega-cap tech yields relief as real rates tick lower.
      • Cross: Futures consolidating at 19,840, primed for squeeze on short positions.
      • Levels: Support 19,700 / Resistance 20,000
    • US30 (Dow):
      • Direction: Bullish bias
      • Domestic (US): Cyclicals benefit from lower energy input costs post-oil crash.
      • Cross: Up 300 points as market recovers from hawkish Fed.
      • Levels: Support 39,200 / Resistance 39,800
    • UK100 (FTSE):
      • Direction: Bearish bias
      • Domestic (UK): High concentration of energy and mining giants drags index lower.
      • Cross: Under intense pressure, shedding 1.1% to near 8,150.
      • Levels: Support 8,100 / Resistance 8,240
    • DAX:
      • Direction: Bullish bias
      • Domestic (DE): Stable wage tracker and HICP at 2.0% target support sentiment.
      • Cross: Cleared 25,000 handle, riding global risk-on peace wave.
      • Levels: Support 24,850 / Resistance 25,150
    • Nikkei:
      • Direction: Bullish bias
      • Domestic (JP): Energy security relief from Hormuz reopening boosts importing firms.
      • Cross: Closed up 1.65% to record 71,053 on global de-escalation.
      • Levels: Support 70,200 / Resistance 71,500
    • BTC:
      • Direction: Neutral bias
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Funding rates remain flat with muted spot ETF inflows.
      • Cross: Grinding sideways at $67,240, lagging broader equity risk-on.
      • Levels: Support $66,800 / Resistance $67,600

    Positioning watch: Speculative positioning features crowded longs in Copper (92nd percentile) and DXY (81st), making them highly vulnerable to liquidation. Conversely, extreme short positions in JPY (0th percentile), S&P 500 (6th), and Nasdaq (10th) expose shorts to aggressive, fast-paced squeeze risks on positive growth surprises.

    The pain trade: A violent, broad-based short squeeze in the Nasdaq 100 back above 20,000 as declining yields and plunging oil input costs trigger aggressive panic-buying from crowded short specs.

  • NY Session Tactical Brief – Thursday, 18 June

    Regime: Risk-on, driven by the historic US-Iran peace deal reopening the Strait of Hormuz, which has triggered a massive global equity relief rally and a collapse in crude prices, despite the VIX lifting to 18.44 and the US 10-year yield holding at 4.43%.

    Today’s market themes:

    • Theme 1: Structural collapse in crude prices as the Strait of Hormuz reopening releases a wave of locked supply, depressing WTI below $75 per barrel.
    • Theme 2: Bank of England keeps rates steady at 3.75% with a surprise 7-2 dovish split, triggering heavy GBP selling toward $1.3200.
    • Theme 3: Global equity markets break out to historic milestones as the Nikkei hits 71,053 and Germany’s DAX eclipses 25,000 on stable wage metrics.

    The setup: The landscape has shifted dramatically following the signing of an interim US-Iran peace deal, removing the threat to the world’s most critical energy transit choke point. WTI crude has plunged over 4.4% overnight, collapsing below $75 per barrel, which is unleashing a wave of disinflationary relief across global capital markets and neutralizing Governor Warsh’s hawkish debut at the Fed. Equity futures are aggressively bid ahead of the New York cash open, with Nasdaq futures leading a 2.0% surge to reclaim lost ground, while US 10-year Treasury yields consolidate around 4.43%. Tactically, we are buying the equity breakout and funding it through shorts in energy-sensitive majors like USDCAD, while treating the Cable drop below $1.3200 as an overextended reaction to a heavily crowded short position.

    Watch list (native time per event):

    • 09:30 CET CHF: SNB Policy Rate Decision (forecast 0.00%, actual 0.00% hold)
    • 10:00 CET CH: SNB Press Conference following the policy decision
    • 12:00 BST GBP: Bank of England Official Bank Rate (forecast 3.75%, actual 3.75% hold, 7-2 vote split)
    • 12:00 BST GBP: BoE Monetary Policy Summary release

    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 transition and stable 4.43% 10Y yields underpin greenback demand.
      • Cross: Supported by safe-haven unwinds in European crosses and heavy GBP selling pressure.
      • Levels: Support 100.10 / Resistance 100.80
    • EUR/USD:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (EU): ECB wage tracker confirms stable negotiated growth, cementing further 2026 rate cuts.
      • Cross: Depressed by strong US Dollar momentum and widening US-DE 10Y yield spreads.
      • Levels: Support 1.1440 / Resistance 1.1520
    • GBP/USD (Cable):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (UK): BoE holds rates at 3.75% with a dovish 7-2 vote split.
      • Cross: Plunging toward $1.3200 as US real yields remain highly competitive post-Fed.
      • Levels: Support 1.3180 / Resistance 1.3280
    • USD/JPY:
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (JP): MoF intervention warnings intensify as JGB yields fail to support the Yen.
      • Cross: Surges to 159.20, driven by the hawkish US Fed policy rate outlook.
      • Levels: Support 158.50 / Resistance 159.80
    • USD/CAD (Loonie):
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (CA): Falling WTI crude prices severely weaken Canada’s terms of trade.
      • Cross: Rebounding US Dollar drives USDCAD back toward the 1.4150 multi-month high.
      • Levels: Support 1.4050 / Resistance 1.4160
    • AUD/USD (Aussie):
      • Direction: Neutral-to-Bullish
      • Domestic (AU): Hawkish RBA rate hold reluctance offsets declining industrial metal export values.
      • Cross: Supported by China-linked Hormuz relief, keeping Aussie holding firm above 0.7000.
      • Levels: Support 0.6970 / Resistance 0.7060
    • NZD/USD (Kiwi):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (NZ): RBNZ easing bias following April’s 25bp cut to 3.50% limits upside.
      • Cross: Squeezed lower by DXY strength, pinning Kiwi near the 0.5780 support level.
      • Levels: Support 0.5750 / Resistance 0.5820
    • USD/CHF (Swissy):
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (CH): SNB holds its key policy rate unchanged at 0.00% today.
      • Cross: USD demand keeps Swissy anchored near key 0.8800 level.
      • Levels: Support 0.8750 / Resistance 0.8850
    • EUR/GBP, EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY:
      • Direction (per cross): EUR/GBP Bearish, EUR/JPY Bearish, GBP/JPY Bullish
      • Domestic: Dovish BoE vote shift weakens GBP relative to EUR; JPY remains yield-starved.
      • Cross: Energy relief rally boosts yen cross-flows while EUR/GBP tests 0.8410.
      • Levels: EUR/GBP Support 0.8390, GBP/JPY Resistance 203.50
    • XAU (Gold):
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Falling global real yields and robust central bank bullion purchases provide strong structural support.
      • Cross: Recovers to $4,302 as Middle East peace-driven equity relief overrides firm DXY.
      • Levels: Support $4,280 / Resistance $4,330
    • XAG (Silver):
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Strong industrial demand expectations support silver as the gold-silver ratio stabilizes.
      • Cross: Recovers in tandem with gold, tracking broader commodities despite firm US Dollar.
      • Levels: Support $28.50 / Resistance $30.20
    • WTI / Brent:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Iran deal reopening Hormuz releases substantial supply, collapsing WTI below $75.
      • Cross: Plunging prices depress energy-linked assets despite general risk-on equity sentiment.
      • Levels: WTI Support $73.50 / Resistance $77.00
    • Copper:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): LME inventories rise while China demand recovery fails to absorb spot supply.
      • Cross: Falls after hawkish Fed signals, defying the broader global risk-on equity rally.
      • Levels: Support $4.30 / Resistance $4.55
    • SPX:
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (US): Hormuz peace deal offsets hawkish FOMC debut, lifting S&P 500 futures.
      • Cross: Falling oil prices lower inflation expectations, supporting equity multiple expansion.
      • Levels: Futures reclaiming 5,420; Cash Support 5,380 / Resistance 5,450
    • NDX:
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (US): Tech leadership and strong AI-related flows drive pre-market index futures up 2%.
      • Cross: Massive relief rally completely erases yesterday’s post-Fed interest rate concerns.
      • Levels: Support 18,300 / Resistance 18,900
    • US30 (Dow):
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (US): Cyclical industrials rally on lower energy costs and projected peace-time trade normalization.
      • Cross: Pointing to a 300-point gain, reclaiming 40,150 on global risk-on flow.
      • Levels: Support 39,800 / Resistance 40,400
    • UK100 (FTSE):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (UK): Plunging heavy weight energy sector pulls FTSE down 1.25% to 8,135.
      • Cross: Underperforms global peers as energy-related commodity indexes drag down local shares.
      • Levels: Support 8,100 / Resistance 8,200
    • DAX:
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (DE): ECB wage tracker relief prints a multi-week high above 25,000 milestone.
      • Cross: Surges as falling energy input costs boost Germany’s export-heavy industrial base.
      • Levels: Support 24,800 / Resistance 25,200
    • Nikkei:
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (JP): Strait of Hormuz reopening lifts a massive energy import risk off Japan.
      • Cross: Surges 1.65% to record close of 71,053 on global peace relief.
      • Levels: Support 70,000 / Resistance 71,500
    • BTC:
      • Direction: Neutral-to-Bullish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Funding rates remain flat with quiet spot ETF inflows holding BTC at $67,450.
      • Cross: Consolidating ahead of NY open, highly sensitive to Nasdaq intraday momentum.
      • Levels: Support $67,000 / Resistance $68,500

    Positioning watch: Speculative positioning is highly extended, with crowded shorts in GBP (17th percentile) and JPY (0th percentile) vulnerable to massive short-squeeze risks on positive surprises. Conversely, overextended longs in Copper (92nd percentile) and Bitcoin (98th percentile) face liquidation risks if the current global peace-driven growth narrative experiences any execution friction.

    The pain trade: The ultimate pain trade is a relentless, broad-based global equity surge that forces aggressive capitulation among crowded S&P 500 and Nasdaq short-sellers, triggered by an immediate, trouble-free resumption of commercial shipping through the Strait of Hormuz.

  • DJIA Erases Fed Losses on Tech Relief – Thursday, 18 June

    Where we are: The Dow Jones Industrial Average is trading up approximately 300 points in early European trade, clawing back the lion’s share of yesterday’s 500-point plunge from intraday record highs. The turnaround is led by high-beta tech components, with Intel surging over 10% in pre-market trading on headlines of an Apple chip-supply deal. This bounce-back pushes the index right back toward yesterday’s peak, defying the late-session selling that followed the Federal Reserve’s hawkish hold. We are set to open near yesterday’s high-water mark, effectively resetting the trading range ahead of the New York cash open.

    What’s driving it: US equity futures are aggressively repricing yesterday’s FOMC decision, where traders are choosing to look past the restrictive dot plot despite Chairman Kevin Warsh’s hawkish hold highlighting that half the committee still favors a rate hike this year. Treasury yields are sliding in response to macro relief, with the US 10-year yield falling 4 basis points to 4.43% and the 2-year yield easing to 4.05%, which alleviates the discount-rate pressure on long-duration mega-caps. Corporate-specific tailwinds are supercharging index sentiment, particularly after President Trump’s social media post regarding a massive Intel-Apple chip deal sent Intel shares up more than 10%, while a signed memorandum of understanding with Iran has driven WTI Crude down over 4% to $84.65, easing energy-driven inflation anxieties.

    • Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh’s hawkish debut—launching operational task forces and overseeing a dot plot where 50% of policymakers project another hike—initially spooked the street but has failed to break the medium-term bullish equity structure.
    • Intel’s 10% pre-market surge is lifting the broader Dow and semi space, with market participants looking ahead to Micron’s earnings next week and brushing off Nvidia’s brief post-FOMC cooling.
    • Speculator positioning remains modestly short at -2,539 contracts (56th percentile of open interest), meaning there is no structural overhang of long positioning to trigger a deeper liquidation cascade, even as the VIX rose to 18.44.

    NY session focus: Focus shifts to the 08:30 ET data double-header, where the Philly Fed Manufacturing Index (expected at 9.8) and weekly Unemployment Claims (forecast at 225K) will either validate the growth resilience narrative or rekindle stagflation fears. If the data prints soft, expect the Dow to push decisively through the 40,000 psychological handle and test fresh record highs, while a hot print risks a sharp re-test of yesterday’s post-Fed low. Long positions in cyclical components look vulnerable if claims surprise to the upside, but the broader momentum remains bid. The pain trade is a swift squeeze higher that forces the remaining net-short specs to capitulate.

  • Dow Jones Rebounds as Iran Peace Accord Cushions Fed – Thursday, 18 June

    Where we are: The Dow Jones is pointing to a robust 300-point opening gain, currently trading near the 40,150 level in early European cash. This rebound follows a volatile session on Wednesday where the index posted a fresh all-time high before suffering a sharp 500-point late-day sell-off. Futures established a solid overnight floor at 39,900 and have steadily ground higher, tracking a broader bid across US equity futures. We expect an immediate challenge of the 40,300 level as New York traders look to erase yesterday’s post-FOMC capitulation.

    What’s driving it: US equity markets are quickly shaking off yesterday’s hawkish Federal Reserve hold, refocusing instead on easing yields and substantial corporate tailwinds. Although half of the FOMC now projects at least one more rate hike this year under new Chairman Kevin Warsh, the US 10-year Treasury yield has actually eased four basis points to 4.43%, while the 10-year real yield has fallen to 2.14%. This decline in real yields is providing a supportive backdrop for equities, further amplified by a massive 4.48% drop in WTI crude to $84.65 after President Trump signed the Iran peace accord. Additionally, highly supportive single-stock headlines, including Intel surging over 10% on Apple deal speculation and a key upgrade for Salesforce, are providing the index with heavy sector-specific momentum.

    • The Federal Reserve’s hawkish hold, which saw half of the committee project another rate hike alongside Kevin Warsh’s launch of operational task forces.
    • A major macro relief valve via the US-Iran memorandum of understanding, driving WTI crude down 4.48% and significantly lowering near-term inflation expectations.
    • A constructive positioning profile, with net non-commercial accounts holding a modest net short of -2,539 contracts (56th percentile of open interest), setting the stage for a short-covering squeeze.

    NY session focus: The immediate focus turns to the 08:30 ET release of the Philly Fed Manufacturing Index and weekly Unemployment Claims to see if macroeconomic data supports the soft-landing thesis. If claims print above the 225K forecast, expect yields to slide further, fueling a rapid test of yesterday’s record highs above 40,400. The trade that is working is buying the index on dips, particularly given the tailwind from falling real yields and retreating energy costs. The trade at risk is holding short positions on the premise of Fed hawkishness, as the underlying cash flows are ignoring the central bank’s dot plot. The pain trade for this market is a clean breakout above 40,350 that forces under-positioned macro funds to chase the tape higher.

  • NY Session Tactical Brief – Thursday, 18 June

    Regime: Risk-on sentiment dominates the global transition into the New York session, with US 10-year yields easing 4bp to 4.43% and equity futures rallying despite elevated volatility (VIX at 18.44), driven by geopolitical relief over the US-Iran Strait of Hormuz agreement.

    Today’s market themes:

    • Theme 1: Strait of Hormuz reopening triggers a violent collapse in energy prices, with WTI and Brent plunging below $75 and $78.
    • Theme 2: Bank of England’s cautious 7-2 hold at 3.75% anchors Cable near $1.3205 while European equities diverge.
    • Theme 3: Tech-led recovery as Nasdaq futures surge 2.0% to 19,950, reversing post-FOMC hawkishness after Warsh’s debut.

    The setup: The immediate trade is capitalizing on the dramatic unwind of the energy risk premium following the US-Iran interim agreement, which has released a wave of supply and pushed WTI crude below $75 per barrel. This supply shock is disinflationary, supporting the macro rebound in US Treasuries and driving Nasdaq futures 2% higher to 19,950. However, the risk lies in headline vulnerability surrounding the Moscow refinery drone strike, which could abruptly halt the crude sell-off and reignite stagflation fears.

    Watch list (native time per event):

    • 09:30 CET CHF: SNB Monetary Policy Assessment and Policy Rate (forecast 0.00%, prior 0.00%)
    • 12:00 BST GBP: Bank of England Official Bank Rate (forecast 3.75%, prior 3.75%, actual 7-2 hold)
    • 07:00 BST GBP: Claimant Count Change (forecast 25.8K, prior 26.5K)

    Bias by asset:

    • DXY:
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (US): Hawkish Fed shift led by Warsh supports DXY despite slight yield decline.
      • Cross: Global risk-on tone eases safe-haven demand as Hormuz agreement boosts equities.
      • Levels: Support 100.20 / Resistance 101.10
    • EUR/USD:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (EU): ECB wage tracker confirms stable pressures, supporting persistent regional monetary easing bias.
      • Cross: Rising DXY and narrowing US-DE 10Y yield spread cap EUR/USD below 1.1500.
      • Levels: Support 1.1440 / Resistance 1.1520
    • GBP/USD (Cable):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (UK): BoE votes 7-2 to hold rates at 3.75%, maintaining cautious stance.
      • Cross: Stronger DXY and widening US-UK 10Y yield spread pressure Cable toward $1.3200.
      • Levels: Support 1.3180 / Resistance 1.3250
    • USD/JPY:
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (JP): MoF intervention warnings intensify as JGB yields fail to defend the currency.
      • Cross: High US 10Y yields near 4.43% drive USD/JPY to multi-month highs near 158.80.
      • Levels: Support 158.00 / Resistance 159.20
    • USD/CAD (Loonie):
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (CA): Falling energy exports drag domestic growth prospects, keeping BoC rate cuts active.
      • Cross: Collapsing crude prices and DXY strength push USD/CAD toward 1.4100 multi-month highs.
      • Levels: Support 1.4050 / Resistance 1.4150
    • AUD/USD (Aussie):
      • Direction: Neutral
      • Domestic (AU): RBA remains hawkish on stubborn services CPI, defending the 0.7000 handle.
      • Cross: Plunging industrial metal prices and weak Chinese demand offsets broader risk-on sentiment.
      • Levels: Support 0.6970 / Resistance 0.7040
    • NZD/USD (Kiwi):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (NZ): RBNZ easing bias remains intact as domestic demand and dairy indicators flag.
      • Cross: DXY strength and global growth caution keep NZD/USD heavy near $0.5780.
      • Levels: Support 0.5740 / Resistance 0.5820
    • USD/CHF (Swissy):
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (CH): SNB keeps policy rate at 0.00%, limiting Swiss yield upside.
      • Cross: Broad DXY strength lifts USD/CHF as safe-haven franc bids unwind globally.
      • Levels: Support 0.8920 / Resistance 0.9050
    • EUR/GBP, EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY:
      • Direction (per cross): EUR/GBP bearish, EUR/JPY bearish, GBP/JPY neutral
      • Domestic: Cautious BoE hold at 3.75% outpaces the ECB’s soft, wage-tracker-validated stance.
      • Cross: Strong dollar cap on G10 and JPY weakness stabilizes crosses near key pivots.
      • Levels: EUR/GBP support 0.8400 / GBP/JPY resistance 201.20
    • XAU (Gold):
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Real yields decline to 2.14%, providing a structural tailwind for gold.
      • Cross: Easing yields and geopolitical hedging push spot gold back above $4,300/oz.
      • Levels: Support $4,280 / Resistance $4,330
    • XAG (Silver):
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Silver benefits from structural industrial demand despite fluctuating gold-silver ratios.
      • Cross: Broad dollar consolidation and risk-on sentiment bolster silver toward recent range highs.
      • Levels: Support $29.50 / Resistance $31.20
    • WTI / Brent:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): WTI discount to Brent widens as domestic supply expectations ramp up.
      • Cross: Broad dollar stability and cooling inflation expectations exacerbate the massive commodity sell-off.
      • Levels: Brent support $77.00 / Resistance $81.50
    • Copper:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Escalating LME stock builds and weak industrial demand indicators cap physical market.
      • Cross: Hawkish Federal Reserve comments weigh heavily on copper, pulling prices down.
      • Levels: Support $4.40 / Resistance $4.65
    • SPX:
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (US): Falling real yields and corporate buybacks support Wall Street equity benchmarks.
      • Cross: Declining oil prices ease inflation fears, prompting a 0.7% S&P futures recovery.
      • Levels: Futures support 5,420 / Resistance 5,500
    • NDX:
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (US): Technology sector experiences massive structural inflows, driving Nasdaq futures up 2.0%.
      • Cross: Falling 10-year Treasury yields to 4.43% stimulate aggressive growth stock buying.
      • Levels: Futures support 19,800 / Resistance 20,100
    • US30 (Dow):
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (US): Industrial and financial sectors catch bid, pushing Dow futures up 300 points.
      • Cross: Lower oil prices boost transport and industrial stocks, easing cost-push margin pressures.
      • Levels: Futures support 39,850 / Resistance 40,300
    • UK100 (FTSE):
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (UK): Index down 1.15% at 8,215 as heavyweight energy shares plunge on crude collapse.
      • Cross: Underperforms global benchmarks as sterling stability keeps downward pressure on multinationals.
      • Levels: Support 8,180 / Resistance 8,280
    • DAX:
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (DE): ECB wage tracker relief pushes German benchmark past the 25,000 milestone.
      • Cross: Follows US tech futures higher as global growth sentiment remains resilient.
      • Levels: Support 24,850 / Resistance 25,150
    • Nikkei:
      • Direction: Bullish
      • Domestic (JP): Megabanks and semiconductor stocks surge, lifting index 1.65% to record 71,053.
      • Cross: Extremely weak yen near 158.80 supercharges export sector revenues in local currency.
      • Levels: Support 70,200 / Resistance 71,500
    • BTC:
      • Direction: Bearish
      • Domestic (asset-specific): High leverage funding rates and slower ETF inflows suppress spot prices.
      • Cross: Fails to catch the Nasdaq tech bid, trading heavy ahead of New York.
      • Levels: Support $64,200 / Resistance $67,500

    Positioning watch: Speculative positioning is highly vulnerable to short squeezes in the Japanese Yen (0%ile) and the S&P 500 (6%ile) following their extended stretches, while crowded longs in Bitcoin (98%ile) and Copper (92%ile) face severe liquidation risks on any hawkish macroeconomic surprises.

    The pain trade: The ultimate pain trade is a violent reversal higher in crude prices triggered by sudden escalation in the Moscow refinery drone strikes, forcing a rapid unwind of equity longs and a painful short squeeze across battered energy sectors.

  • Dow Futures Climb as Tech Bid Defies Fed – Thursday, 18 June

    Where we are: Dow Jones futures are staging an aggressive 300-point recovery this morning, trading back up to test the 40,150 region as the index claws back more than half of yesterday’s steep 500-point post-FOMC sell-off. The overnight range has been remarkably resilient, establishing a firm base at 39,800 before pushing higher during European cash hours. This rebound puts the blue-chip index within striking distance of yesterday’s record highs, despite the hawkish shift in the FOMC’s dot plot. We see 39,950 as the pivotal intraday level to hold if the bulls are to maintain control heading into the New York bell.

    What’s driving it: The primary catalyst remains the market’s digestion of yesterday’s Federal Reserve policy decision under new Chairman Kevin Warsh, where a hawkish dot plot showing half the committee favoring another rate hike this year was initially traded as a major policy headwind. However, equity markets are quickly looking past this tightening bias, supported by a dramatic cooling in energy-driven inflation risks after President Trump signed a memorandum of understanding with Iran, which sent WTI crude tumbling 4.48% to $84.65. Further idiosyncratic support is flowing from the tech space, where Intel has surged over 10% in premarket trading following Trump’s posts regarding a landmark chip deal with Apple. With US 10-year Treasury yields slipping 4.0 basis points to 4.43% and real yields easing to 2.14%, the broader macro architecture continues to provide a supportive backdrop for risk assets.

    • The Federal Reserve’s hawkish turn, with 50% of the FOMC projecting a rate hike this year, is being counterbalanced by Chairman Warsh’s operational revamp and the launch of new task forces.
    • WTI crude’s 4.48% decline to $84.65 provides a significant margin-expansion tailwind for industrial components within the blue-chip index.
    • CFTC speculative positioning is remarkably clean, with net non-commercial positions sitting in a modest short stance at -2,539 contracts (56th percentile), meaning there is no overhang of crowded longs to trigger a cascading liquidation.

    NY session focus: Ahead of the New York open, the focus immediately shifts to the 08:30 ET releases of the Philly Fed Manufacturing Index and weekly Unemployment Claims, where any sign of macro resilience will support the soft-landing narrative. On the charts, a clean break above 40,250 opens the door to blue-sky territory, while a failure to hold the 39,950 support level on hot macro data would risk a retest of yesterday’s lows near 39,600. The trade that is working is buying the intraday dips in high-quality cyclicals, whereas shorting this index on purely hawkish Fed rhetoric remains highly risky given the underlying corporate earnings momentum. The pain trade is a rapid squeeze higher that forces the under-positioned speculative shorts to cover, catapulting the index to new all-time highs above 40,300.