
AUD/USD Surges to 0.7250 as Brent Crude Breaks $101 on Middle East Tensions
Commodity currencies lead the forex market following a 7% weekly oil spike and a blowout 115K US payrolls report.
The Australian Dollar gained 0.57% to hit 0.7250 during early Asian trade as Brent crude crossed $101.29 per barrel. Safe-haven flows and a hawkish repricing of Federal Reserve rate expectations are driving massive institutional repositioning across the G10 complex.
Global benchmark Brent crude broke above $101.29 per barrel during early Asian trade on Monday, triggering a 0.57% surge in AUD/USD to 0.7250 after reports of United States and Iranian forces exchanging fire in the Strait of Hormuz. Spot gold simultaneously hit a record $4,727.32 per ounce, rising 0.63% as institutional desks aggressively bid up safe-haven assets and commodity-linked currencies ahead of the European open. The geopolitical escalation compounds a hawkish repricing across the forex market, driven by Friday's massive 115,000 Non-Farm Payrolls print that severely reduced expectations for near-term Federal Reserve rate cuts.
Energy-exporting currencies are capturing the bulk of the early-week momentum. The Australian Dollar established itself as the top G10 performer, trading in a tight band between 0.7236 and 0.7250. Buyers are aggressively acquiring the Aussie because the Reserve Bank of Australia recently pushed its cash rate to 4.35% with a 0.25% rate hike, providing a massive yield advantage over other commodity peers. When U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude oil spikes 0.64% daily to reach $95.42 per barrel due to Middle East supply disruptions, the terms of trade for energy and mineral exporters immediately improve. This dynamic forces macro funds to adjust their forex exposure to capture the commodity premium.
The geopolitical bid extends far beyond crude oil. Comex gold futures advanced nearly 2% over the past week to settle at $4,730.70 per ounce. Silver completely outperformed the broader precious metals complex, climbing 5.8% to finish at $80.86 per ounce. Industrial precious metals absorbed the energy supply shocks directly, with platinum adding $36.00 to reach $2,074.80 per ounce and palladium closing higher by $12.50 at $1,517.25 per ounce. A pullback in the 10-Year U.S. Treasury yield is reducing the real yield of dollar-denominated assets, forcing institutional capital into these hard-asset cpi" title="Understanding inflation and CPI in forex">inflation hedges.
Bank of Japan Holds 0.75% After $54.7 Billion Intervention
While commodity currencies rally, USD/JPY is stabilizing near 156.62 following a volatile week of central bank action. The Bank of Japan kept its short-term policy rate unchanged at 0.75% in a fractured 6-3 vote on Sunday, with three dissenting board members demanding an immediate hike to 1.0%. According to the official monetary policy statement, the central bank raised its core inflation outlook for fiscal 2026 to 2.8%, a sharp increase from the previous 1.9% projection, explicitly citing higher crude oil prices as a primary inflationary driver.
The yen's current consolidation around the 156.37 support zone follows massive covert action by Japanese authorities. Data from the Federal Reserve released this weekend showed custody holdings of marketable U.S. Treasury securities for foreign official accounts dropped by $8.7 billion to $2.73 trillion in the week ending May 6. Currency analysts estimate Japan's Ministry of Finance spent approximately $54.7 billion during that exact period to defend the yen. By selling dollar-denominated assets to buy yen in the open market, the Ministry of Finance temporarily broke the speculative short-yen momentum, though traders continue to test the upper bounds of the intervention zone.
Dollar Index Firm at 98.16 Following 115K NFP Shock
The broader US Dollar Index is trading up 0.10% at 98.16, drawing sustained support from both geopolitical safe-haven flows and a radical shift in U.S. interest rate expectations. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported on Friday that the U.S. economy added 115,000 jobs in April, entirely crushing the Wall Street consensus forecast of 62,000. Healthcare led the gains with 37,000 new positions, keeping the headline unemployment rate anchored at 4.3%.
The dollar's strength is further anchored by the Q1 2026 Advance GDP estimate released late last month. The Bureau of Economic Analysis reported the U.S. economy expanded at an annualized rate of 2.0%, a massive rebound from the sluggish 0.5% growth recorded in Q4 2025. According to the report details, this 2.0% expansion was heavily funded by an 8.7% surge in gross private domestic investment, specifically a 10.4% jump in business equipment and structures tied to artificial intelligence infrastructure. This underlying economic resilience gives the incoming Federal Reserve leadership ample runway to maintain restrictive rates.
This robust labor market and growth data directly alters the yield differential between the U.S. dollar and rival currencies. Interest rate futures markets are now pricing in a 70% probability that the Federal Reserve will hold its benchmark policy rate steady in the 3.50% to 3.75% range through the entirety of 2026. The shift in forward guidance comes at a critical leadership juncture for the central bank. Chair Jerome Powell concludes his eight-year term as head of the Federal Reserve on May 15, remaining on the board as a governor while the Senate prepares to vote on Kevin Warsh as his successor.
Sterling Hits 1.3600 on 5% Inflation Fears
Across the Atlantic, GBP/USD is exhibiting exceptional relative strength, gaining 0.56% to trade at 1.3600 during the early London crossover. Institutional demand for the British Pound stems from aggressive repricing of Bank of England monetary policy. Traders are pricing in rapid tightening measures based on internal central bank models warning that UK inflation will return to the 5.0% level by the end of the year.
The Euro is mirroring this upward trajectory against the greenback, with EUR/USD gaining 0.36% to trade at 1.1786. The pair is absorbing the geopolitical shocks effectively, bolstered by weekend diplomatic developments. On May 10, European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde signed an updated Memorandum of Understanding with Reserve Bank of India Governor Sanjay Malhotra, expanding institutional cooperation between the two monetary authorities beyond their original 2015 agreement.
Key Levels and Catalysts for Your Week Ahead
As you manage your positional risk this week, strict adherence to technical resistance levels is mandatory given the geopolitical premium priced into the markets. In the USD/JPY pair, the 160.50 level stands as the ultimate upside resistance breakout trigger. If dollar bulls pierce that ceiling, it will signal that the Ministry of Finance's $54.7 billion intervention has fully failed, likely prompting rapid algorithmic buying.
For your euro exposure, EUR/USD is currently testing massive technical resistance at the psychological 1.1800 handle. Sellers are heavily defending this zone, and a daily close above 1.1800 is required to validate a structural bullish reversal. Similarly, if you are trading the Mexican Peso, USD/MXN is tightly compressed at 17.1499, with the 17.50 level acting as a hard resistance barrier that has rejected multiple breakout attempts this month.
Your primary macro catalyst arrives on Tuesday, May 12, with the release of the U.S. Consumer Price Index. The March data showed headline inflation surging to 3.3%, the highest print since May 2024. If Tuesday's April CPI release prints above that 3.3% threshold, expect an immediate spike in U.S. Treasury yields that will likely drag the dollar index aggressively higher against the entire G10 complex.

FN Pulse Editorial Team
Expert Trading Analysts
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