Category: UK

  • Retail Sales Beat Lifts Footsie Despite Banking Drag – Friday, 19 June

    Where we are: The Footsie is grinding out a modest 0.3% gain to trade around 8,215, staging a partial recovery from yesterday’s post-BoE slide but remaining on track for a 0.5% weekly loss. Intraday price action has established a firm base above the 8,180 support level, though the upside is capped by strong resistance at 8,250. Sector performance is highly bifurcated today, as strong gains across defensive pharma and heavyweight energy majors are fighting a rear-guard action against heavy selling in domestic lenders and diversified miners.

    What’s driving it: UK retail sales rebounded sharply by 1.2% m/m in May, easily beating the 0.5% forecast and signaling resilient consumer demand that complicates the Bank of England’s path after keeping the Bank Rate at 3.75% yesterday. Adding to the domestic cross-currents, the PRA’s 06:00 BST release of Basel 3.1 internal model approach adjustments has triggered a sell-off in domestic banks, with Lloyds sliding 1.8% and Barclays down 0.9% on regulatory compliance jitters. This financial drag is being offset by defensive pharmaceutical strength—led by AstraZeneca’s 1.6% advance—and a recovery in oil majors BP and Shell as WTI crude stabilizes at $84.65 per barrel.

    • UK Core CPI ticking up to 2.6% in May alongside a tight 4.9% unemployment rate validates the BoE’s hawkish hold at 3.75% and limits the scope for near-term monetary easing.
    • Retail sales outperformance (+1.2% vs. 0.5% expected) underscores robust household balance sheets but keeps upward pressure on short-end gilt yields, flattening the UK curve.
    • The PRA’s Basel 3.1 internal model approach consultation at 06:00 BST has injected fresh regulatory uncertainty into the banking sector, directly penalizing domestic lenders like Lloyds and NatWest.

    NY session focus: As we transition to the New York open, the focus turns to the US 08:30 ET macro data, where any signs of US growth resilience will bolster global risk assets but could push US 10-year real yields above their current 2.23% level, creating a headwind for the index’s mining sector. The tactical trade is to buy defensive UK large-caps like AstraZeneca above 12,000p, while the long-financials trade looks highly vulnerable to a deeper correction below the FTSE 8,180 support. Watch the 8,250 level closely; a clean break above this opens the door to 8,310, whereas a breakdown below 8,150 invalidates the daily recovery thesis. The pain trade is a sharper-than-expected squeeze higher in global yields that forces a rapid unwind of rate-sensitive growth proxies, driving the FTSE 100 back down toward its weekly lows of 8,120.

  • 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.

  • Persistent UK Core Inflation Underpins Guppy Ahead of NY – Friday, 19 June

    Snapshot: GBP/JPY is grinding higher toward 200.50 as sticky UK core inflation of 2.6% and resilient wage growth reinforce the Bank of England’s cautious 8-1 hold. Today’s 07:00 London retail sales recovery provides an additional domestic floor, while the Bank of Japan’s slow normalisation bias does little to halt the currency’s slide.

    • Policy Divergence: The MPC remains reluctant to commit to a cut path with services CPI near 5%, while recent BoJ minutes and Deputy Governor Himino’s comments confirm Tokyo will only hike at a crawl, leaving the yield spread firmly in Sterling’s favour.
    • Intervention Thresholds: Spot is approaching multi-month highs near 201.20, where MoF/BoJ communication risk will escalate rapidly; any sudden spike in the VIX from 18.44 or US 10-year yields shifting from 4.49% post-08:30 NY data could trigger sudden profit-taking.

    Bias into NY: We favour a constructive bias targeting 200.80, as domestic UK macro strength supports the cross, though we expect fast money to trim longs ahead of psychological resistance near 201.00.

  • 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.

  • Sterling Shorts Face Squeeze on Retail Beat – Friday, 19 June

    Where we are: Cable has managed to claw its way back above the 1.3200 handle in early European trading, staging a decent intraday recovery from its recent two-month low. The pair spent the overnight session carving out a base around 1.3175, but a fresh impulse of domestic buying has lifted it back into yesterday’s NY range. We see immediate structural resistance clustered around 1.3240, while a daily close below 1.3150 would open the trapdoor for a deeper run toward the psychological 1.3000 level.

    What’s driving it: UK consumer resilience has taken center stage after this morning’s 07:00 BST retail sales print handily beat expectations, providing a solid counterweight to the Bank of England’s cautious hold at 3.75% yesterday. Gilts are trading under mild pressure as domestic terminal rate expectations nudge higher, which is helping to widen the nominal yield spread in Sterling’s favor despite a firm US Dollar Broad Index hovering near 119.50. This yields-driven support is being reinforced by the PRA’s decision to ease Basel 3.1 capital requirements for investment bank trading books, a structural shift that is injecting some life into London’s financial flows. The geopolitical headwind from the abruptly canceled US-Iran peace talks in Switzerland is capping global risk appetite, but the domestic fiscal and political landscape is stabilizing as market-friendly technocrats are brought in to advise Andy Burnham ahead of a potential leadership challenge.

    • The Bank of England’s decision to maintain the Bank Rate at 3.75% while trimming its Q4 2026 inflation projection to 3.25% signals that the MPC is in no rush to ease, especially with domestic core CPI stubbornly sitting at 2.6% y/y.
    • A stellar UK retail sales m/m bounce at 07:00 BST offsets the previous -1.3% contraction, proving that consumer demand remains robust enough to keep services inflation sticky near the 5% level.
    • Speculative positioning is heavily short-loaded with CFTC net non-commercial contracts sitting at -64,213 (the 17th percentile of its 52-week range), creating an asymmetric setup for a violent short-squeeze on any hawkish UK developments or US data misses.

    NY session focus: For the New York session, all eyes turn to the 08:30 ET US macro data dump, where any signs of softening will act as a massive accelerant to the nascent Sterling recovery. We like playing the long side of Cable above 1.3200, targeting a clean run toward 1.3280, while a breakdown below the 1.3170 overnight low invalidates our immediate bullish bias. The momentum trade of selling Cable on global risk-off is looking increasingly tired and vulnerable to a squeeze. The ultimate pain trade is a rapid squeeze back through 1.3310 as over-leveraged shorts are forced to cover their positions into the weekend.

  • Footsie Finds Support on Strong Retail Sales Rebound – Friday, 19 June

    Where we are: The FTSE 100 is posting modest gains of 0.3% to trade around 8,240, recovering from an overnight low of 8,195 as European cash trading progresses. The index is clawing back some of its weekly losses, which still stand at roughly 0.6% after yesterday’s post-BoE slide. Immediate resistance sits at 8,280, with a clean break there needed to reverse this week’s bearish bias, while the 50-day moving average at 8,185 provides critical support.

    What’s driving it: UK retail sales rebounded by 1.2% m/m in May, easily beating the 0.5% consensus forecast and injecting fundamental resilience into domestic consumer-facing sectors. This demand strength comes alongside a sticky domestic inflation profile, where Core CPI recently ticked up to 2.6% YoY, justifying the Bank of England’s decision yesterday to maintain the Bank Rate at 3.75%. UK bank stocks are underperforming today as the market digests the PRA’s freshly released Basel 3.1 internal model adjustments, which are offsetting gains in defensive pharma giants like AstraZeneca. Gilt yields are tracking the firm domestic activity data higher, a move amplified by US 10-year Treasury yields pushing to 4.49% and tightening broader financial conditions.

    • The 1.2% rebound in May UK Retail Sales signals robust household spending power, limiting the scope for aggressive near-term Bank of England rate cuts despite overall public sector borrowing hitting £23.3 billion.
    • The Prudential Regulation Authority’s 06:00 BST consultation on Basel 3.1 market risk rules has introduced regulatory shifts for UK lenders, pulling Lloyds down 1.8% and acting as a major drag on the index’s financial sleeve.
    • A stark sectoral divergence is keeping the index afloat, with defensive heavyweights AstraZeneca (+1.6%) and GSK (+0.9%) attracting inflows, while miners like Rio Tinto and Glencore slip up to 1.1% on global growth concerns.

    NY session focus: Macro traders are focused on the US data dump at 08:30 ET, where an upside surprise in activity will fuel US yields and pressure global equity valuations. The tactical play is to buy defensive healthcare and aerospace names on dips, while remaining underweight the rate-sensitive banking sector. Watch the 8,200 level on the FTSE 100; a daily close below this floor opens the doors to the 8,150 zone. The pain trade is a sharp short-squeeze back above 8,280 if US data prints soft enough to spark a broad-based relief rally across European cash equities.

  • Guppy Squeezes Higher on Solid UK Retail Sales – Friday, 19 June

    Snapshot: Sterling is finding fresh buyers after UK Retail Sales rebounded in today’s 07:00 London print, reinforcing the Bank of England’s cautious, data-dependent stance. This domestic resilience contrasts sharply with the Bank of Japan’s glacial normalisation path, where despite overnight remarks from Deputy Governor Himino, the policy rate remains pinned at a lowly 0.50%.

    • With UK Core CPI ticking up to 2.6% and unemployment low at 4.9%, the BoE’s dominant 8-1 vote split looks highly likely to maintain the Bank Rate at 4.50% well into the summer.
    • Watch the 08:30 NY macro data slate, as any further backup in US 10-year real yields—currently at 2.23%—could trigger localized risk-off deleveraging and transient Yen short-covering.

    Bias into NY: We maintain a structural buy-on-dips bias for GBP/JPY, expecting the massive 400bp policy rate differential to sustain the upside trend, targeting a test of key psychological resistance overhead.

  • 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.

  • Cable Squeeze Risk Grows as Retail Sales Rebound – Friday, 19 June

    Where we are: Cable has caught a firm bid in European trade, recovering from its recent slide to trade just above $1.3200 as we approach the New York open. The pair bounced off overnight lows near $1.3160, staging a decent recovery after threatening to break key technical support at the $1.3150 level. While we are still on track for a weekly decline of over 1%, this intraday recovery from a two-month low shows that buyers are stepping in to defend the psychological $1.3200 threshold. This keeps the immediate trading range bounded by $1.3150 on the downside and the 50-day moving average near $1.3280 on the upside.

    What’s driving it: A significant rebound in UK Retail Sales for May, showing a 0.5% m/m expansion against the prior month’s drop, has underpinned the domestic growth outlook and forced a swift reassessment of aggressive near-term easing. This stronger economic footprint matches the Bank of England’s cautious hold at 3.75% yesterday, where the MPC highlighted stubborn services inflation near 5% and sticky wages as core hurdles to any immediate rate-cut path. Domestically, the political landscape is also shifting as Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham’s by-election victory in Makerfield and his strategic recruitment of heavyweight ex-BoE advisors act to calm fiscal concerns and reassure the City of policy continuity. These sterling-supportive drivers are meeting a global backdrop where a slight softening in the US Dollar index to 119.50 helps amplify the pound’s intraday recovery.

    • The Bank of England’s decision to maintain Bank Rate at 3.75% yesterday, coupled with a June policy summary pointing to Q4 inflation projections of 3.25%, underscores a hawkishly biased hold that pushes out rate-cut expectations.
    • The PRA’s newly corporate-friendly Basel 3.1 adjustments, which dilute capital rules for investment banks’ trading activities, have provided a regulatory sigh of relief for the City and sparked a supportive bid in UK financial assets.
    • CFTC speculator positioning shows a heavily crowded net short stance in Sterling at -64,213 contracts (the 17th percentile of its 52-week range), leaving the market highly vulnerable to a sharp short-squeeze on any positive domestic catalyst.

    NY session focus: Our focus now shifts to the US session open and the impending 08:30 ET data prints, where any downside surprise in US data will likely supercharge this Sterling short-squeeze back toward the $1.3280 level. The tactical trade that is working is long Cable from $1.3180, targeting a run toward $1.3250 with a tight stop below the overnight low of $1.3160. The trade at risk is holding legacy short positions, as the combination of domestic macro resilience and extremely light positioning leaves shorts highly exposed. The ultimate pain trade is a rapid squeeze higher that forces a chaotic stop-out of the crowded short base above $1.3300.

  • Footsie Defies Banking Drag as Retail Sales Rebound – Friday, 19 June

    Where we are: The Footsie is grinding higher toward the 8,230 level as the London session progresses, clawing back some of the losses that have left the index down 0.5% on the week. This intraday bid follows a constructive morning cash session where early seller exhaustion near the 8,180 support zone triggered a steady rotation into defensive heavyweights. While the index is off its weekly highs, it sits comfortably above yesterday’s NY close, establishing a short-term base ahead of the Wall Street open. The intraday range remains bounded by 8,180 on the downside and the 100-day moving average near 8,280 on the upside.

    What’s driving it: Domestic macro is dictating today’s price action, led by a stellar UK retail sales print of 1.2% m/m at 07:00 London that handily beat the 0.5% forecast, signaling that consumer demand remains highly resilient despite the Bank of England keeping the Bank Rate restrictive at 3.75% yesterday. This consumer resilience is clashing with regulatory headwinds after the PRA’s 06:00 London consultation on Basel 3.1 market risk internal models, a development that is actively depressing the heavyweight banking sector with Lloyds falling 1.8% and Barclays shedding 0.9%. This banking drag is being partially offset by a defensive rotation into pharma giants AstraZeneca (+1.6%) and GSK (+0.9%), while a modest recovery in WTI crude to $84.65 is providing a secondary lift to BP and Shell. The broader market remains sensitive to the domestic inflation profile after core CPI ticked up to 2.6% YoY, keeping pressure on the gilt curve and capping any unchecked equity multiple expansion.

    • The Bank of England’s hold at 3.75% coupled with core CPI ticking up to 2.6% YoY keeps the domestic yield curve flatter, limiting the near-term valuation upside for interest-rate-sensitive domestic equities.
    • Today’s retail sales rebound to 1.2% m/m provides a fundamental cushion for domestic consumer discretionary names, helping the index absorb the fiscal drag of May’s £23.3 billion public sector borrowing print.
    • The PRA’s Basel 3.1 internal model adjustments are driving a stark intraday sector divergence; UK lenders are underperforming European peers as traders price in more stringent market risk capital charges, making FTSE banks a tactical funding leg for defensive pharma longs.

    NY session focus: As we head into the New York session, all eyes are on the US 08:30 ET macro prints, where any downside surprise in US yields from the current 4.49% level on the 10-year could spark a broader global risk-on rally. We like playing the FTSE defensively here, staying long AstraZeneca and GSK while fading banking rallies as the market digests the PRA’s regulatory tightening. A break above 8,250 would open the door to a test of the 100-day moving average at 8,280, whereas a hawkish US data print will likely push the index back down to test the 8,180 support. The absolute pain trade is a massive short-squeeze above 8,300 driven by a sudden collapse in global bond yields and the VIX sliding back below 18.

  • Guppy Bid on Sticky UK Core – Friday, 19 June

    Snapshot: GBP/JPY maintains a firm bid this morning as sticky UK core inflation, which ticked up to 2.6% in May, keeps the Bank of England reluctant to commit to a rate-cutting cycle. This hawkish domestic bias contrasts with the Bank of Japan’s ultra-slow 0.50% normalisation path, reinforced by yesterday’s monetary policy minutes, although further Sterling gains remain sensitive to Japanese MoF intervention warnings as the Yen languishes near historical lows.

    • UK core CPI rising to 2.6% alongside a tight 4.9% unemployment rate solidifies the BoE’s cautious 8-1 hold stance, establishing a hard floor under Sterling.
    • Spillover from a 15bp spike in US 2-year yields to 4.2% and a VIX rising to 18.44 could trigger global risk-off deleveraging ahead of the NY open, presenting sudden JPY short-covering risks.

    Bias into NY: Tactically bullish GBP/JPY toward the recent highs, supported by the wide BoE-BoJ yield spread, with downside limited unless US macro data at 08:30 NY triggers a broad risk-off rout.

  • Sterling Shorts Face Squeeze After Retail Sales Beat – Friday, 19 June

    Where we are: Cable is grinding higher to trade just above the 1.3200 level ahead of the New York open, recovering from overnight lows but remaining on track for a weekly decline of more than 1%. The market has established a firm base around yesterday’s post-BoE lows, with spot currently testing intraday resistance near 1.3225. We are seeing a steady stabilization from the prior NY close of 1.3180, suggesting the heavy selling of the past few days has run its course. Technical resistance at the 1.3250 level is the immediate target for bulls, which could trigger a broader recovery toward 1.3300.

    What’s driving it: The primary driver this morning is the sharper-than-expected recovery in domestic consumer demand, with UK retail sales rebounding strongly at 07:00 BST to beat forecasts and offset the previous month’s -1.3% contraction. This resilient data print backs up the Bank of England’s cautious, data-dependent stance after the MPC held the Bank Rate at 3.75% yesterday, refusing to commit to an aggressive easing cycle despite trimming its Q4 2026 inflation forecast to 3.25%. Gilt yields have edged higher in response, supporting the currency’s recovery while the broader dollar index (DXY) sits heavy near 119.50. Additionally, the local political premium is fading as Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham’s victory in the Makerfield by-election has been well received, especially as his recruitment of heavyweights, including former Bank of England economists, reassures the City of market-friendly fiscal discipline.

    • The Bank of England’s decision to hold rates at 3.75% and maintain its cautious bias, keeping the policy rate high relative to European peers.
    • Political risk mitigation via Andy Burnham bringing in top economists to guarantee fiscal orthodoxy before his potential leadership run, lifting a major weight off Gilt markets.
    • Positioning is a major catalyst, with CFTC data showing net non-commercial positions at a crowded short of -64,213 contracts (17th percentile of its 52-week range), creating an explosive setup for a short-squeeze on any positive news or dollar weakness.

    NY session focus: We now turn our attention to the upcoming US macroeconomic prints at 08:30 ET, which will dictate whether this nascent Cable rally turns into a full-scale short-covering rally. A downside surprise in the US figures will likely push GBP/USD past the near-term resistance at 1.3250, exposing the 1.3280 level and eventually 1.3320. The trade that is working is scaling into long Sterling positions on shallow intraday dips, while holding structural USD longs at these elevated levels represents the main risk. The pain trade is a violent run on the massive pool of outstanding GBP shorts, forcing a rapid squeeze back toward 1.3350.

  • Footsie Shrugs Off Bank Drag as Retail Sales Rebound – Friday, 19 June

    Where we are: The Footsie is grinding out a modest intraday recovery to trade slightly firmer, though the index remains on track for a weekly decline of just over 0.5%. Early resilience is being led by defensive heavyweight pharma and a bid in the energy sector, which are helping to cushion a pronounced sell-off in domestic lenders and basic materials. This keeps the index locked in its well-defined range, capped by the psychological overhead resistance at 8,300, while the 50-day moving average acts as immediate dynamic support below.

    What’s driving it: The primary engine of today’s price action is a hot UK retail sales print of 1.2% m/m, which easily cleared the 0.5% consensus and signals robust underlying domestic demand. This consumer resilience, paired with core inflation ticking up to 2.6% YoY, justifies the Bank of England’s hawkish hold at 3.75% yesterday and tempers near-term rate cut expectations. While the PRA’s newly published Basel 3.1 market risk internal model adjustments are putting pressure on high-street banks, the broader equity market is finding a cushion in recovering WTI crude prices, which are supporting heavyweights like BP and Shell.

    • A blowout UK retail sales rebound of 1.2% m/m against expectations of 0.5% underscores sticky consumer demand, backing up Gilt yields and cementing the BoE’s cautious 3.75% hold.
    • The PRA’s newly released Basel 3.1 market risk internal model consultation has sparked a correction in domestic lenders, with Lloyds shedding 1.8% and Barclays off nearly 1.0%.
    • Defensive leadership is starkly outperforming cyclical beta, with AstraZeneca gaining 1.6% alongside a recovery in WTI crude to $84.65/bbl that has insulated BP (+1.5%) from the bank-led sell-off.

    NY session focus: As the New York desk opens, all eyes turn to the 08:30 ET US macro data, where any upward surprise in yields could squeeze global equity risk and test the FTSE’s resilience. Tactically, we are buying the defensive-to-cyclical rotation within the index, targeting long healthcare and energy against short domestic financials and miners. The trade at risk is a structural breakout above 8,300, which will remain frustrated as long as sterling remains supported by sticky UK core CPI at 2.6%. The absolute pain trade for the street is a sudden drop below the 8,150 support level, which would force the capitulation of stale long positions ahead of the weekend.

  • 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.

  • Sticky UK Core Keeps Guppy Bid Ahead of NY – Friday, 19 June

    Snapshot: GBP/JPY remains well-bid as sticky UK domestic inflation—with core CPI ticking up to 2.6% and services near 5%—keeps the Bank of England’s 8-1 hawkish majority firmly locked in. This stubborn domestic price pressure highlights a stark policy divergence against a Bank of Japan still dragging its feet at 0.50% despite hawkish noise in yesterday’s April minutes.

    • Structural support remains anchored by this wide policy rate differential, leaving the pair poised to test the psychological 200.00 level if UK retail sales momentum sustains the domestic growth story.
    • MoF intervention risk remains the primary threat to yen shorts, with Tokyo highly sensitive to rapid downside, especially if global risk-off pressure pushes the VIX past 18.44.

    Bias into NY: We favor buying intraday dips toward 198.80 with a view to targeting 200.50, as the BoE’s data-dependent caution protects the pound’s yield advantage, even if rising US real yields at 2.23% inject some cross-asset volatility into the NY open.