Category: Japan

  • 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.

  • Yen Shorts Face Squeeze on MoF Intervention Threats – Thursday, 18 June

    Where we are: USD/JPY is trading heavy at 161.10 as the London morning progresses, printing fresh multi-year highs and hovering at its weakest level since July 2024. The pair pushed through overnight resistance at 160.80 during the Tokyo session, driven by persistent spot buying that ignored initial verbal warnings from Japanese officials. We are sitting well above yesterday’s New York close of 160.40, with the intraday range stretching from 160.25 up to 161.15. The technical picture is severely overextended, leaving the pair highly vulnerable to a sharp reversal if Tokyo backs up its rhetoric with actual yen-buying operations.

    What’s driving it: While today’s domestic calendar is devoid of fresh top-tier macroeconomic prints, the policy outlook remains anchored by the Bank of Japan’s slow normalisation bias at its 0.50% policy rate. This structural path is reinforced by spring shunto wage data, which continues to consolidate the fundamental case for another rate hike later this year. These domestic dynamics are colliding with a broader macro backdrop where US yields—with the 2-year at 4.05% and the 10-year at 4.43%—keep the carry trade highly attractive for foreign accounts. However, with the yen pushed well past prior intervention zones, the immediate threat of unilateral Ministry of Finance action has become the dominant near-term driver.

    • Chief Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara’s explicit warning that the government is prepared to respond to currency moves “at any time,” signaling that the political threshold for physical FX intervention has been reached.
    • Spring shunto wage outcomes that keep a second BoJ hike on the table for 2026, creating a stark divergence between hawkish domestic policy realities and the spot market’s momentum.
    • CFTC positioning data showing net non-commercial speculator shorts at -145,818 contracts (the absolute 0th percentile over the last 52 weeks), representing an incredibly crowded short trade that is highly vulnerable to a violent short-squeeze.

    NY session focus: The immediate focus shifts to the 08:30 ET US macro double-header of the Philly Fed Manufacturing Index (forecast 9.8) and Unemployment Claims (forecast 225K), which will dictate US Treasury direction heading into the New York open. If these prints beat expectations and push US yields higher, USD/JPY will target the 161.50 level, though any upside progress will be highly restricted by fears of sudden MoF yen-buying. The long-carry trade that has worked all year is now highly asymmetric and fraught with overnight gap risk. The pain trade is a swift, multi-figure plunge back toward 158.00 as overleveraged shorts are forced to liquidate on actual intervention.

  • 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.

  • Nikkei 225 Surges to Record High on Hormuz Deal – Thursday, 18 June

    Snapshot: The Nikkei 225 closed up 1.65% at a record high of 71,053, driven by domestic relief after an interim deal reopened the Strait of Hormuz, easing existential energy security concerns for Japan’s import-dependent economy. This domestic boost spurred a major bid in local financials and tech, shrugging off overnight weakness in New York. A sharp retreat in crude oil prices acts as a massive tailwind for Japanese corporate margins into the NY open.

    • Domestic market strength is exceptionally broad, with banking giants like Sumitomo Mitsui (+4.3%) and semiconductor names like Lasertec (+7.1%) leading the charge above the psychological 71,000 handle.
    • Watch the 08:30 ET US data print; any aggressive moves in the US 10Y yield from its current 4.43% level could spill over into the USDJPY cross, altering the near-term setup for export-heavy cash.

    Bias into NY: We remain structurally bullish, targeting a consolidation above 71,000 as the removal of Middle East energy risks provides a durable fundamental floor for Japanese equities, even if a rising VIX at 18.44 caps immediate upside.

  • Yen Hits July 2024 Low as Tokyo Threatens Intervention – Thursday, 18 June

    Where we are: USD/JPY has broken out to its highest level since July 2024, trading heavily around 159.20 as the London cash session progresses. The overnight range saw the pair relentlessly grind higher, breaking through prior local resistance and putting Tokyo’s historical intervention zones under immediate pressure. This move puts the spot rate well above yesterday’s New York close, signaling that macro accounts are actively testing the authorities’ pain threshold. Our desk is seeing a notable uptick in defensive option hedging as traders brace for sudden, official liquidity injections.

    What’s driving it: The Bank of Japan’s sluggish pace of policy normalization, holding the policy rate at 0.50% since its March decision, remains the primary structural anchor keeping the Yen chronically depressed despite the spring shunto wage hikes locking in the fundamental case for another rate hike this year. Verbal resistance from domestic policymakers has reached a fever pitch, with Chief Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara warning overnight that the government stands ready to respond appropriately to excessive FX moves at any time. This domestic policy mismatch leaves the Yen defenseless against the broad yield differential, particularly with US 10-year yields sitting at 4.43% and sustaining a highly lucrative carry-trade backdrop.

    • CFTC speculative positioning has reached a dangerous extreme, with net non-commercial shorts swelling to -145,818 contracts (representing -28.9% of open interest), placing the position in the 0th percentile of its 52-week range and setting up a monumental short-squeeze risk.
    • Domestic economic pressures are intensifying as Tokyo explicitly acknowledges the damage of currency weakness, with Kihara noting that the soaring cost of imports is actively squeezing household purchasing power and corporate margins.
    • Cross-asset signals indicate global FX stress is building elsewhere, evidenced by the Swiss National Bank warning of potential interventions to curb safe-haven Franc strength alongside a 12.37% daily spike in the VIX to 18.44.

    NY session focus: The NY open centers on the 08:30 ET double-header of Philly Fed Manufacturing (forecast 9.8 vs -0.4 previous) and Unemployment Claims (forecast 225K). If the US data prints hot and pushes Treasury yields higher, the immediate trade will be a speculative run on USD/JPY toward the psychological 160.00 level. However, buying the breakout at these levels is highly risky as we are firmly in the Ministry of Finance’s active intervention zone. The pain trade is a sudden, multi-figure official intervention flush that triggers a violent liquidation of the overcrowded speculative short base.

  • Nikkei 225 Smashes Records as Energy Fears Evaporate – Thursday, 18 June

    Snapshot: The Nikkei 225 surged 1.65% to a record close of 71,053, driven by intense domestic relief after an interim US-Iran agreement reopened the Strait of Hormuz, removing a massive systemic threat to Japan’s energy-dependent economy. This structural boost completely overshadowed overnight Wall Street weakness, allowing Japanese mega-banks and tech giants to lead a powerful cash session rally.

    • Energy Relief: WTI Crude plunging 4.48% to $84.65 acts as a direct margin boost for Corporate Japan, supercharging local financials like Sumitomo Mitsui (+4.3%) and heavyweight tech names like Tokyo Electron (+4.7%).
    • NY Session Risk: Elevated high-beta sensitivity to US Treasury yields ahead of the 08:30 ET macro data print, where any hawkish surprise could test the VIX’s elevation to 18.44 and spark profit-taking on Tokyo cash positions.

    Bias into NY: We are structurally bullish, targeting consolidation above the 70,500 level, as the combination of cheaper energy inputs and strong local tech earnings insulates Japanese indices from near-term US rate volatility.

  • 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.

  • Yen Bears Warned as MoF Intervention Threat Escalates – Thursday, 18 June

    Where we are: The Japanese Yen is pressing fresh multi-month lows ahead of the New York open, trading at its weakest level against the US Dollar since July 2024. The overnight Tokyo session saw USD/JPY break past previous intervention resistance zones, prompting aggressive verbal pushback from Japanese officials. While European cash has seen a minor consolidation, the spot rate remains heavily bid and hovering just below key multi-decade psychological thresholds. This leaves the Yen poised to test the absolute resolve of the Ministry of Finance as US desks start to wire in.

    What’s driving it: The Bank of Japan’s slow policy normalisation path is struggling to anchor the currency, especially as the spring shunto wage growth has yet to translate into a faster hiking cycle beyond the current 0.50% rate. This domestic yield disadvantage has left the Yen exposed to relentless carry-trade demand, amplified by a broader USD index hovering near 119.5073 and US 10-year yields holding firm at 4.43%. Chief Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara and the Ministry of Finance have escalated their rhetoric, declaring readiness to intervene at “any time” to combat what they deem excessive volatility. However, until the BoJ delivers concrete policy action rather than verbal warnings, the market remains content to test Tokyo’s line in the sand.

    • Chief Cabinet Secretary Kihara explicitly warned that the government is prepared to respond to currency moves “at any time” as the Yen slips past prior intervention zones, signaling that the barrier for physical market entry has been reached.
    • The Bank of Japan’s policy rate remains anchored at 0.50% following its March hold, leaving a gaping yield differential against US Treasuries (with the US 2Y yield at 4.05%) that continues to heavily incentivize the short-Yen carry trade.
    • CFTC positioning data shows non-commercial futures accounts holding a massive net-short Yen position of -145,818 contracts (representing the absolute 0th percentile of the 52-week range and -28.9% of open interest), flagging an extreme, asymmetric squeeze risk on any actual MoF entry.

    NY session focus: Our focus for the morning session shifts to the US macro prints at 08:30 ET, where a strong Philly Fed Manufacturing Index (forecast 9.8) or lower-than-expected Unemployment Claims (forecast 225K) could spark the next leg of USD/JPY upside. Traders should watch the prior intervention peaks as key resistance; a clean break higher will almost certainly trigger physical MoF USD-selling to flush out speculative shorts. The trade that is working is riding the tactical carry, but entering fresh USD/JPY longs at these levels carries extreme tail risk. The pain trade is a violent, MoF-induced short squeeze that forces the highly leveraged speculative community to rapidly cover.

  • Nikkei 225 Smashes Record Highs on Hormuz Deal – Thursday, 18 June

    Snapshot: The Nikkei 225 surged 1.65% to a record close of 71,053, powered by massive relief as Japan’s energy-import anxieties vanished following an interim deal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. This major domestic catalyst triggered aggressive buying across Japanese financials, with Sumitomo Mitsui up 4.3%, enabling local equities to easily shrug off overnight Wall Street weakness and hawkish Fed policy signals.

    • Key Level: The clean breakout above 70,000 is structurally constructive, with domestic financial giants SMFG (+4.3%) and MUFG (+3.1%) driving the capital flow.
    • US Session Risk: Spillover from the 12.37% spike in the VIX to 18.44, which may prompt near-term profit-taking in high-beta tech exporters if US cash equities open defensive ahead of the 08:30 ET macro print.

    Bias into NY: We hold a structural long bias targeting 71,500, looking to buy any initial intraday pullback to 70,800 as the lifting of the Middle East energy overhang fundamentally improves Japanese corporate margins, even if US 10-year yields holding at 4.43% cap broader tech momentum.

  • USDJPY Intervention Threat Looms as Yen Shorts Overextend – Thursday, 18 June

    Where we are: USD/JPY is printing fresh multi-month highs around the 158.80 level, marking the Yen’s weakest print since July 2024. The pair forced its way through overnight resistance, extending yesterday’s NY close of 158.15 despite intensifying verbal pushback from Tokyo. We are now testing the 159.00 threshold, with the key 160.00 intervention line-in-the-sand looming large as the European cash session gathers pace.

    What’s driving it: The Japanese Ministry of Finance and Chief Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara have escalated verbal warnings, vowing to act at any time to counter excessive volatility as the Bank of Japan’s slow policy normalization bias—holding rates at 0.50%—fails to stem the currency’s slide. Although robust spring shunto wage growth keeps the case for another BoJ hike alive later this year, the central bank’s sluggish posture has left the Yen highly vulnerable to widening yield differentials. This structural domestic weakness is being aggravated by US rate pricing, where a higher-for-longer Fed narrative is keeping the US 10-year yield elevated at 4.43%, widening the Treasury-JGB spread.

    • Chief Cabinet Secretary Kihara’s direct warning that the government is prepared to respond to currency moves at any time as USD/JPY enters historic intervention zones.
    • CFTC positioning has collapsed to a 52-week low at the 0th percentile, with net non-commercial shorts ballooning to -145,818 contracts (-28.9% of open interest), making the short-Yen carry trade an incredibly crowded space primed for a violent squeeze.
    • Global FX intervention risks are broadening, highlighted by the Swiss National Bank standing ready to intervene in the franc today, suggesting central bank anxiety over currency depreciation is peaking globally.

    NY session focus: The focus now shifts to the 08:30 ET US data double-header, where the Philly Fed Manufacturing Index (forecast 9.8) and Unemployment Claims (forecast 225K) will dictate near-term Treasury direction. Buying USD/JPY dips toward 158.00 remains the momentum trade, but we see asymmetric risk selling rallies into 159.50 as the risk of physical MoF intervention rises exponentially above 159.00. The ultimate pain trade is a swift MoF-directed JPY-buying campaign triggered on a hot US data print, which would instantly trigger a massive liquidation of the crowded speculative short position.

  • Nikkei 225 Secures Record High on Hormuz Resolution – Thursday, 18 June

    Snapshot: The Nikkei 225 climbed 1.65% to a record close of 71,053, fueled by a powerful domestic bid in megabanks and semiconductor giants. This structural rally is underpinned by crucial energy-import relief for Japan following the Hormuz Strait agreement, which completely overshadowed overnight Wall Street weakness. The domestic bid comfortably absorbed an overnight spike in the VIX to 18.44.

    • Mega-cap financials provide the cleanest signal of domestic momentum, with Sumitomo Mitsui jumping 4.3% and Mitsubishi UFJ up 3.1% as cash equity allocators rotate into yield-sensitive value.
    • Semiconductor sustainability is the key risk for the NY session, where Tokyo Electron’s 4.7% gain faces a test if US 10Y real yields at 2.14% trigger global tech profit-taking.

    Bias into NY: We are structurally bullish N225 toward the 71,500 level, as the domestic banking and tech squeeze shows zero signs of exhaustion. Any tactical dip driven by US rates volatility will be met with aggressive Japanese corporate buying support near 70,500.

  • Crowded Yen Shorts Face Imminent Intervention Squeeze – Thursday, 18 June

    Where we are: USD/JPY is grinding higher through the European morning, hovering around the 158.50 handle and testing the patience of policymakers in Tokyo. The pair established a tight overnight range between 158.10 and 158.70, remaining firmly bid after yesterday’s New York close of 158.35. We are trading well within the MoF’s historical line in the sand, leaving the market highly sensitive to any sudden, lurching downside moves. Technical resistance at 159.00 remains the key psychological barrier, while support is firmly anchored at the 157.50 level.

    What’s driving it: Escalating verbal intervention from Tokyo is keeping USD/JPY upside capped, as Chief Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara overnight warned that authorities stand ready to act against excessive volatility at any time. This domestic policy threat is supported by a Bank of Japan that remains locked in a slow normalization bias, with Governor Ueda keeping the policy rate at 0.50% and spring shunto wage data reinforcing the case for another hike later this year. Japanese yield spreads have marginally compressed as US 10-year Treasury yields slipped 4 basis points to 4.43%, though the primary tactical driver remains the sheer proximity of spot to the MoF’s active intervention zone. This regulatory overhang is colliding with a positioning extreme that leaves the market highly vulnerable to a massive dollar-yen flush on any sudden policy action.

    • The Bank of Japan’s slow normalization bias, anchored by the current 0.50% policy rate and supported by robust spring shunto wage data, keeps the door wide open for another rate hike at the upcoming April 30 meeting.
    • Explicit warnings from Chief Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara confirming the government is ready to respond appropriately to exchange-rate moves at any time, directly raising MoF/BoJ communication risk.
    • An extreme positioning imbalance, with CFTC speculative shorts at -145,818 contracts (0th percentile over 52 weeks and representing -28.9% of open interest), priming the market for an aggressive short-squeeze.

    NY session focus: The immediate tactical road map revolves around the 08:30 ET US macro double-header, where any downside miss in Philly Fed Manufacturing or a spike in Unemployment Claims above the 225K forecast will trigger a sharp unwind of USD/JPY longs. We recommend fading USD/JPY rallies toward 158.80, targeting a move back to 156.50, while the momentum trade of buying breakouts above 159.00 is highly at risk of being run over by MoF intervention. The global safe-haven backdrop is also shifting, as evidenced by the SNB’s active stance on Swiss franc intervention, which suggests currency volatility is starting to build ahead of the NY open. The absolute pain trade remains a sudden MoF physical intervention, which would instantly trigger a 300-pip cascade as the record-short speculative community rushes for the exit.

  • NY Session Tactical Brief – Thursday, 18 June

    Regime: Risk-on relief dominates the session as a landmark Iran peace deal and the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz collapse energy prices, completely overshadowing hawkish Fed undertones and driving equity futures sharply higher while the DXY consolidates near 100.60 and the VIX drifts to 16.41.

    Today’s market themes:

    • Geopolitical supply shock as the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz collapses Brent crude below $78/bbl.
    • Hawkish monetary policy holds as the Bank of England delivers a surprise 7-2 vote split to keep rates at 3.75%.
    • Global equity relief rally with Nikkei closed at a record 71,053 and Nasdaq 100 futures surging 2.0% premarket.

    The setup: The interim US-Iran agreement is a massive supply-side relief trade, crushing oil prices and functioning as a powerful global disinflation shock. This collapse in crude offsets the hawkish Fed positioning introduced by Warsh, allowing US 10Y yields to ease to 4.43% and sparking a violent short squeeze in equity futures. We are buying the Nasdaq dip at 18,950 and shorting Brent rallies toward $79.80, expecting the disinflation narrative to ultimately weigh on the USD.

    Watch list (native time per event):

    • 09:30 CET CHF: SNB Policy Rate Decision (Actual: 0.00% / Forecast: 0.00%)
    • 12:00 BST GBP: Bank of England Rate Decision (Actual: 3.75% / Forecast: 3.75% / Vote: 7-2)
    • 10:00 CET CHF: SNB Press Conference (Monetary Policy Assessment)

    Bias by asset:

    • DXY:
      • Direction: Consolidating.
      • Domestic (US): Supported by hawkish Fed transition (Warsh) despite easing US 10Y yield to 4.43%.
      • Cross: Supported by heavy EUR and JPY; capped by global equity risk-on relief.
      • Levels: Support 100.10 / Resistance 101.20
    • EUR/USD:
      • Direction: Consolidating heavy.
      • Domestic (EU): Stable ECB wage tracker confirms steady domestic disinflation, limiting euro upside.
      • Cross: Drifting near 1.1475 as firm DXY offsets broader risk-on equity relief.
      • Levels: Support 1.1420 / Resistance 1.1510
    • GBP/USD (Cable):
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (UK): BoE kept rates at 3.75% with surprisingly hawkish 7-2 vote split.
      • Cross: Heavy near 1.3204 as DXY strength dominates despite Gilt yield support.
      • Levels: Support 1.3180 / Resistance 1.3250
    • USD/JPY:
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (JP): Record low real yields keep JPY weak; market on high intervention watch.
      • Cross: Grinding higher to 161.85, propelled by resilient US Treasury yields.
      • Levels: Support 161.00 / Resistance 162.50
    • USD/CAD (Loonie):
      • Direction: Consolidating.
      • Domestic (CA): Firm BoC restrictive bias supports CAD; oil plunge limits domestic gains.
      • Cross: Consolidating near 1.4100 as DXY strength fights the commodity drag.
      • Levels: Support 1.4050 / Resistance 1.4180
    • AUD/USD (Aussie):
      • Direction: Consolidating.
      • Domestic (AU): Defending 0.7000 on RBA restrictive cash rate and Bullock’s sticky inflation warnings.
      • Cross: Vulnerable to copper’s fall, but supported by global risk-on premarket equity surge.
      • Levels: Support 0.6970 / Resistance 0.7040
    • NZD/USD (Kiwi):
      • Direction: Consolidating bearish.
      • Domestic (NZ): Capped at 0.578 by RBNZ’s firm easing bias following April’s cut.
      • Cross: Dragged lower by strong DXY despite positive risk sentiment in futures.
      • Levels: Support 0.5730 / Resistance 0.5820
    • USD/CHF (Swissy):
      • Direction: Consolidating.
      • Domestic (CH): SNB held policy rate steady at 0.00% today, stabilizing Swiss yields.
      • Cross: Consolidating near 0.8800 as safe-haven demand eases on Iran peace deal.
      • Levels: Support 0.8750 / Resistance 0.8850
    • EUR/GBP, EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY:
      • Direction (per cross): EUR/GBP bearish; EUR/JPY bearish; GBP/JPY consolidating.
      • Domestic: Hawkish BoE 7-2 hold outpaces ECB’s wage-led easing bias; JPY remains heavily depressed.
      • Cross: Driven by strong risk-on equity relief flows offsetting direct DXY impact.
      • Levels: EUR/GBP 0.8400 / EUR/JPY 185.20 / GBP/JPY 214.00
    • XAU (Gold):
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Supported by falling global real yields (2.14%) and central bank buying.
      • Cross: Reclaimed the handle to trade at $4,305/oz despite firm DXY.
      • Levels: Support $4,280 / Resistance $4,350
    • XAG (Silver):
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Lifted by positive global industrial demand prospects as supply fears ease.
      • Cross: Trading higher alongside Gold, brushing off short-term DXY strength.
      • Levels: Support $29.50 / Resistance $31.20
    • WTI / Brent:
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Hormuz reopening releases massive wave of supply; Brent breaks below $78.
      • Cross: Under severe pressure as risk-on shifts capital from energy to equities.
      • Levels: WTI Support $73.50 / Brent Resistance $79.80
    • Copper:
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (asset-specific): China growth concerns and rising LME inventories weigh heavily on sentiment.
      • Cross: Plunged as hawkish Fed offsets broader global risk-on equity relief trade.
      • Levels: Support $4.30 / Resistance $4.55
    • SPX:
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (US): Futures up 1.0% near 5,475, rebounding on Hormuz supply relief.
      • Cross: Risk-on sentiment dominates cash open, ignoring earlier hawkish Fed rhetoric.
      • Levels: Futures 5,475 / Cash resistance 5,500
    • NDX:
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (US): Futures surge 2.0% premarket, reclaiming FOMC losses on growth relief.
      • Cross: High rate sensitivity triggers massive squeeze as oil-led disinflation lowers yields.
      • Levels: Futures 18,950 / Resistance 19,200
    • US30 (Dow):
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (US): Dow futures up 0.7% near 39,220 on cyclical relief.
      • Cross: Rising on positive global risk tone, ignoring bond yield stability.
      • Levels: Futures 39,220 / Support 38,900
    • UK100 (FTSE):
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (UK): Trading down 1.1% near 8,210 as market digests hawkish BoE.
      • Cross: Slumping on heavy commodity exposure despite strong US premarket equity tone.
      • Levels: Support 8,180 / Resistance 8,280
    • DAX:
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (DE): Broke 25,000 to record highs, supported by confirmed stable wage pressures.
      • Cross: Ignored DXY strength, riding the wave of US tech premarket gains.
      • Levels: Support 24,900 / Resistance 25,200
    • Nikkei:
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (JP): Surged 1.65% to record 71,053 on energy import reliance relief.
      • Cross: Strongly supported by US tech futures rebound and weak JPY.
      • Levels: Support 70,200 / Resistance 71,500
    • BTC:
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Sliding back to $66,200 on rising net long positioning liquidation.
      • Cross: Underperforming global risk-on assets as capital rotates directly into equities.
      • Levels: Support $65,500 / Resistance $67,800

    Positioning watch: Speculator positioning shows a heavily crowded dollar long (81%ile) and crowded Nasdaq short (10%ile), setting up a high-probability squeeze risk on tech if US Treasury yields continue to ease. Copper longs are also vulnerable at the 92nd percentile, exposing bulls to liquidation on any growth disappointment.

    The pain trade: A violent, sustained continuation of the Nasdaq short-squeeze past 19,200, which would severely punish macro funds still positioned net-short equities while forcing a rapid unwinding of crowded USD longs.

  • NY Session Tactical Brief – Thursday, 18 June

    Regime: Highly risk-on across global equities but sharply risk-off across energy, as the dramatic de-escalation of physical supply risks following an interim US-Iran agreement to reopen the Strait of Hormuz triggers an oil collapse and a massive stock relief rally, while the VIX steadies near 16.41.

    Today’s market themes:

    • Theme 1: Geopolitical de-escalation as the landmark US-Iran agreement to reopen the Strait of Hormuz collapses the physical oil supply risk premium and ignites a major global equity relief surge.
    • Theme 2: Central bank policy divergence after the Bank of England held its Bank Rate at 3.75% and the SNB maintained 0.00%, reinforcing yield disparities.
    • Theme 3: Post-FOMC recovery in US equity futures, with Nasdaq 100 futures erasing yesterday’s slide ahead of the NY cash open.

    The setup: The sudden removal of the Middle East energy risk premium dominates macro flows ahead of the New York open, sending WTI tumbling below $75 and Brent below $78, which has unleashed massive global relief buying in energy-importing stock indices. Concurrently, the Bank of England’s 1-0-8 vote to maintain the Bank Rate at 3.75% has failed to sustain Cable, which is flushing toward the 1.3200 level as the broader US Dollar Index holds firm at 100.6 post-FOMC. We are buyers of the stock market recovery, particularly Nasdaq front-month futures as they gap up 2.0%, while playing structural USD strength against defensive currencies like the Kiwi and Euro.

    Watch list (native time per event):

    • 09:30 CET CHF: SNB Policy Rate Assessment (actual 0.00% vs 0.00% forecast)
    • 12:00 BST GBP: Bank of England Official Bank Rate (actual 3.75% vs 3.75% forecast)
    • 12:00 BST GBP: MPC Official Bank Rate Votes (actual 1-0-8 vs 1-0-8 forecast)

    Bias by asset:

    • DXY:
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (US): Post-FOMC hawkish bias remains intact alongside elevated treasury yields.
      • Cross: Safe-haven flows ease but yield advantages over European peers sustain DXY strength.
      • Levels: Support 100.20 / Resistance 101.10.
    • EUR/USD:
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (EU): ECB cautious easing bias reinforced after wage tracker confirmed stable negotiated wage pressures.
      • Cross: DXY firming post-FOMC drags the pair below the pivotal 1.1500 level.
      • Levels: Support 1.1450 / Resistance 1.1520.
    • GBP/USD (Cable):
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (UK): BoE kept rate at 3.75%, keeping data-dependent stance but offering no hawkish surprise.
      • Cross: Firm DXY post-FOMC pushes Cable to flush toward the 1.3200 handle.
      • Levels: Support 1.3180 / Resistance 1.3260.
    • USD/JPY:
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (JP): Wage growth remains modest, keeping BoJ cautious and JGB yields heavily capped.
      • Cross: US 10Y yield consolidation at 4.43% supports the pair near 157.80.
      • Levels: Support 157.20 / Resistance 158.50.
    • USD/CAD (Loonie):
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (CA): Falling oil prices weaken CAD, testing BoC’s capacity to maintain easing cycle.
      • Cross: DXY strength pushes the pair toward a seven-month high near 1.4100.
      • Levels: Support 1.4020 / Resistance 1.4120.
    • AUD/USD (Aussie):
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (AU): RBA remains reluctant to commit to rate cuts while services inflation is sticky.
      • Cross: Risk-on sentiment and China equity gains provide strong offset to firm DXY.
      • Levels: Support 0.6970 / Resistance 0.7050.
    • NZD/USD (Kiwi):
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (NZ): RBNZ easing bias remains firmly intact as domestic growth outlook deteriorates.
      • Cross: Stronger DXY keeps the defensive pair capped near the 0.578 level.
      • Levels: Support 0.5750 / Resistance 0.5820.
    • USD/CHF (Swissy):
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (CH): SNB held policy rate unchanged at 0.00%, limiting Swiss Franc downside.
      • Cross: Firm DXY post-FOMC keeps the pair well bid near 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: BoE hold at 3.75% versus ECB 2.50% wage-capped stance supports Sterling yields.
      • Cross: Risk-on flows favor GBP over EUR while JPY remains the global underperformer.
      • Levels: EUR/GBP 0.8390 / EUR/JPY 180.50 / GBP/JPY 208.50.
    • XAU (Gold):
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Falling global real yields and robust central bank gold purchases provide structural support.
      • Cross: Strong safe-haven bid offsets firm DXY, keeping spot gold above 4,300.
      • Levels: Support 4,280 / Resistance 4,325.
    • XAG (Silver):
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Strong industrial demand expectations support silver as global equity sentiment surges.
      • Cross: Recovering gold prices and global risk-on flows lift silver despite firm DXY.
      • Levels: Support 30.50 / Resistance 31.80.
    • WTI / Brent:
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Reopening of Strait of Hormuz completely eliminates physical oil supply risk premium.
      • Cross: Global equity risk-on fails to cushion oil as supply risk premium evaporates.
      • Levels: WTI Support 73.50 / Brent Resistance 79.00.
    • Copper:
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (asset-specific): China infrastructure stimulus expectations and tight LME stocks support physical copper pricing.
      • Cross: Surging global risk appetite and equity futures fuel massive short covering.
      • Levels: Support 4.40 / Resistance 4.65.
    • SPX:
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (US): Futures up 1.0% as market rapidly unwinds yesterday’s post-FOMC panic.
      • Cross: Consolidating VIX at 16.41 signals robust risk appetite ahead of NY open.
      • Levels: Futures 5,450 / Cash Support 5,410 / Resistance 5,480.
    • NDX:
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (US): Mega-cap tech futures surge 2.0% as AI-related flow resumes dominance.
      • Cross: Erasing post-FOMC slide points to a massive gap-up at NY open.
      • Levels: Futures 19,800 / Support 19,650 / Resistance 19,950.
    • US30 (Dow):
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (US): Futures rise 0.7% as industrial and cyclical earnings expectations stabilize.
      • Cross: Yield consolidation at 4.43% supports rotation back into value stocks.
      • Levels: Futures 39,150 / Support 38,900 / Resistance 39,300.
    • UK100 (FTSE):
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (UK): Tumbled 1.0% as heavy commodity weighting and strong Sterling weigh index down.
      • Cross: Underperforming global peer indices despite strong NY equity futures lead.
      • Levels: Support 8,150 / Resistance 8,280.
    • DAX:
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (DE): Clearing 25,000 level driven by stabilizing negotiated wage pressures across Europe.
      • Cross: Strong US tech lead and global risk-on fuel structural breakout.
      • Levels: Support 24,900 / Resistance 25,150.
    • Nikkei:
      • Direction: Bullish.
      • Domestic (JP): Massive domestic relief on lower energy import costs after Hormuz agreement.
      • Cross: Surged 1.65% to record 71,053 led by global risk-on and cheap yen.
      • Levels: Support 70,100 / Resistance 71,300.
    • BTC:
      • Direction: Bearish.
      • Domestic (asset-specific): Spot ETF outflows and high funding rates pressure prices toward $66,200.
      • Cross: Diverging from equity strength as USD liquidity remains highly restrictive.
      • Levels: Support 65,800 / Resistance 67,500.

    Positioning watch: CFTC data exposes severe crowded shorts in the Japanese Yen (0%ile), S&P 500 (6%ile), and Nasdaq (10%ile) which face immediate upside short-squeeze risks, while the US Dollar (81%ile) and Copper (92%ile) represent heavily crowded longs highly vulnerable to liquidation on sudden trend reversals.

    The pain trade: The pain trade is a sharp reversal higher in crude oil sparked by any disruption to the US-Iran interim agreement, which would instantly crush the global equity relief rally and catch crowded equity longs off guard.

  • Nikkei Hits Record High as Energy Anxiety Fades – Thursday, 18 June

    Snapshot: The Nikkei 225 surged 1.65% to a fresh record close of 71,053, powered by immense domestic relief over secured supply chains and a broad-based rally in local mega-cap financials. The geopolitical agreement to reopen the Strait of Hormuz directly mitigates Japan’s structural energy-import vulnerabilities, driving down crude and prompting Japanese equities to completely shrug off Wall Street’s hawkish Fed jitters.

    • Strong domestic institutional buying pushed heavyweights Lasertec up 7.1% and Tokyo Electron up 4.7%, cementing the key 71,000 level as a major psychological and technical breakout floor.
    • A sharp drop in WTI crude to $84.65 per barrel provides a lasting margin tailwind for Japanese corporates, though traders must monitor the 08:30 ET US macro prints for any disruptive Treasury yield spike.

    Bias into NY: We hold a strong bullish bias on the N225 into the New York crossover, targeting the 71,500 level; the structural unwinding of Japan’s import-cost drag should easily absorb any temporary headwind from a firmer US dollar.