
All G7 Central Banks Meet Within 48 Hours: Traders Brace for Historic Super Week
BOJ, Fed, ECB, BOE, and BoC policy decisions converge in unprecedented monetary policy showdown

Forex markets face one of the most consequential weeks in modern monetary policy history as all seven G7 central banks announce rate decisions between April 28-30. With the Iran energy shock still unfolding, traders are positioning for elevated volatility across all major currency pairs.
The global forex market enters uncharted territory this week as all seven G7 central banks deliver policy decisions within a compressed 48-hour window—an unprecedented concentration of monetary policy announcements that traders are calling "Super Week." With Brent crude still elevated above $107 and the Iran war stalemate clouding the cpi" title="Understanding inflation and CPI in forex">inflation outlook, currency markets are bracing for extreme volatility as policymakers navigate the most complex macro environment in years.
Unprecedented Central Bank Convergence
The extraordinary schedule begins Monday with the Bank of Japan (BOJ), accelerates Wednesday with back-to-back central bank decisions from the Bank of Canada (BoC) and FOMC, and culminates Thursday in what traders are dubbing "Super Thursday"—simultaneous rate announcements from the Bank of England (BOE) and European Central Bank (ECB), flanked by critical U.S. GDP and Core PCE inflation data.
"This is the most concentrated cluster of G7 central bank decisions we've seen in over a decade," noted Greg Michalowski, Senior Strategist at InvestingLive. "When you layer in 44% of the S&P 500 reporting earnings—including five of the Magnificent Seven—alongside the ongoing Iranian negotiations, you have a perfect storm for currency market volatility."
Monday-Tuesday: BOJ Sets the Tone
The Bank of Japan fires the opening salvo Monday with its policy rate decision. While no change from the current 0.50% rate is expected, markets will parse Governor Kazuo Ueda's press conference on Tuesday for signals on June rate hike timing. Sources familiar with BOJ thinking told Reuters that unlike last year's pause due to U.S. tariffs, the central bank is prepared to resume its normalization cycle as the energy shock risks fueling broad-based inflation.
USD/JPY remains under intense scrutiny near the 160.00 intervention threshold. The pair traded at 159.85 in early Asian hours Monday, just below the level that triggered massive Ministry of Finance intervention in 2024. With Japanese officials repeatedly warning against "excessive volatility," traders are positioned for potential action if the BOJ disappoints dovish expectations.
Australia's March CPI data arrives late Tuesday (9:30 PM ET), adding another volatility catalyst. Consensus expects 4.8% year-over-year inflation, a critical input for the Reserve Bank of Australia's rate outlook. AUD/USD has rallied 3.2% in April but faces resistance at 0.6850, with long positioning reaching what some analysts call "crowded trade" territory.
Wednesday: The North American Double Feature
Wednesday delivers the week's most anticipated events. The Bank of Canada announces its decision at 9:45 AM ET, with markets pricing in a unanimous hold at 2.25%. However, the tone of Governor Tiff Macklem's press conference will be critical—any hint of dovish pivot could accelerate USD/CAD gains, with the pair currently consolidating around 1.3650 after posting seven straight weeks of dollar strength.
The main event arrives at 2:00 PM ET: the FOMC rate decision. Chair Jerome Powell's final meeting (before Kevin Warsh's expected appointment) takes on historic significance. With markets pricing 99.9% probability of a hold at 3.75%, focus shifts entirely to Powell's press conference and how the Fed frames the interest rate outlook amid triple-digit oil prices.
"The Fed is effectively paralyzed," said one hedge fund currency strategist. "They can't cut with oil at $107, but they can't hike with the Iran situation unresolved. Powell's forward guidance on the June meeting will be the only thing that matters."
The U.S. Dollar Index ($DXY) entered the week at 98.47, down 2.03% over the past month. Notably, speculative positioning sits at just the 18th percentile according to CFTC data—a historically extreme short position that could fuel a violent squeeze if the Fed signals any hawkish tilt or if the Iran stalemate persists.
Super Thursday: Four Market-Moving Events in Four Hours
Thursday morning compresses an entire month's worth of market catalysts into a single four-hour window:
7:00 AM ET: Bank of England
Expected to hold at 3.75% with a 0-0-9 vote split (no dissents for cuts or hikes). GBP/USD has found technical support at 1.3320 but faces resistance at 1.3480. Governor Andrew Bailey's commentary on the energy shock's impact on UK inflation expectations will drive sterling direction.
8:30 AM ET: U.S. GDP & Core PCE
Advance Q1 GDP is forecast at 2.1% (vs. 0.5% in Q4), while Core PCE—the Fed's preferred inflation gauge—is expected at 0.3% month-over-month. Any significant deviation from consensus will immediately reprice Fed rate expectations and cascade through all major dollar pairs.
8:30 AM ET: Canada GDP
March GDP forecast at 0.2% month-over-month. A miss could accelerate dovish BoC repricing.
Shortly after: ECB Rate Decision & Press Conference
The European Central Bank is widely expected to hold rates steady. However, President Christine Lagarde's press conference will be scrutinized for any shift in the ECB's inflation narrative. The bank's recent enterprise survey showed longer-term inflation expectations anchored at 3.0% despite the energy shock—giving policymakers room to delay hikes. EUR/USD technical levels to watch: support at 1.0850, resistance at 1.0950.
Risk Management for Traders
Currency option markets are pricing elevated volatility across all G10 pairs. One-week implied volatility on EUR/USD has climbed to 8.2%—the highest level since the March tariff escalation. Similar spikes are evident in GBP/USD (9.1%) and USD/JPY (11.3%).
"This is not a week for complacency," warned a senior FX trader at a European bank. "We've seen 150-pip intraday ranges become routine when just one central bank surprises. With five major decisions plus tier-one data, we're advising clients to cut position sizes by at least 30% and widen stop-loss parameters."
Key Levels to Watch
EUR/USD: Support at 1.0850 (200-day moving average), resistance at 1.0950
GBP/USD: Support at 1.3320, resistance at 1.3480
USD/JPY: Critical intervention level at 160.00
AUD/USD: Resistance at 0.6850, support at 0.6720
USD/CAD: Support at 1.3600, resistance at 1.3750
DXY: Support at 97.50 (key Fibonacci level), resistance at 99.50
Bottom Line
The convergence of all G7 central bank decisions within 48 hours represents an unprecedented test for forex markets already grappling with elevated oil prices and geopolitical uncertainty. While consensus expects no rate changes from any of the five banks, the cumulative impact of forward guidance, inflation assessments, and data releases could trigger significant repricing across currency pairs.
Traders should prepare for multi-session volatility that extends beyond the immediate decision windows. Historical precedent suggests that when multiple central banks deliver surprises in close succession, the resulting volatility can persist for 5-10 trading sessions as markets digest diverging policy paths.
With speculative dollar positioning at decade lows and oil markets on edge, even small hawkish surprises from the Fed or ECB—or conversely, dovish shifts from the BOJ or BoC—could trigger outsized moves. In this environment, risk-reward ratios favor patience over aggression, and survival over heroics.

Jesus Guzman
Founder & Lead Analyst
Jesus is the founder of FN Pulse and a veteran trader with over 15 years of experience in financial markets. He specializes in quantitative analysis and is passionate about bringing transparency and data-driven insights to the retail trading industry.