
USD/JPY Hits 157.21 as Brent Crude Surges Past $105 Ahead of US CPI
Surging oil prices drive a hawkish repricing across global bond markets, pushing the US dollar higher against the Japanese yen and the euro.
Brent crude oil spiked 3.14% to $105.47 per barrel following the collapse of US-Iran peace talks. The resulting energy shock is forcing traders to price out 2026 Federal Reserve rate cuts ahead of Tuesday's critical US inflation report.
Brent crude surged 3.14% to $105.47 per barrel during Monday's European session after US President Trump rejected an Iranian peace proposal, sparking a hawkish repricing in global bond markets that pushed USD/JPY up 0.36% to 157.21. The collapse in diplomatic talks leaves the Strait of Hormuz effectively closed to global shipping, forcing traders to price in a sustained energy shock across major economies. Rising energy costs drove 1-year cpi" title="Understanding inflation and CPI in forex">inflation swaps up by 100 basis points in Europe and 75 basis points in the US today, cementing expectations that central banks will hold rates higher for longer. The US Dollar Index (DXY) consolidated between 97.97 and 97.99 in New York trade, drawing safe-haven bids while markets brace for Tuesday's US Consumer Price Index release.
USD/JPY Hits 157.21 as Speculators Slash Yen Shorts
The clear directional winner in the currency markets is the US dollar's advance against the Japanese yen. USD/JPY climbed to 157.21 today, directly tracking the shift in US Treasury yields as crude oil prices break higher. The transmission mechanism here is straightforward. Japan imports nearly all its energy, so a spike to $105.47 in Brent crude severely damages the nation's terms of trade, fundamentally weakening the yen.
Data from today's Commitments of Traders report showed large speculators slashed their net-short exposure to the Japanese yen by 37.8k contracts. This represents the fastest weekly drop since August 2024. A Japanese government advisory panel formally urged the Bank of Japan to delay further rate hikes to protect corporate funding amid the geopolitical shock.
Despite this political pressure, overnight interest rate swaps show traders price in a 75% probability of a BOJ hike at the June 16 meeting. This follows a contentious 6-3 vote last month where three dissenting members pushed to raise the short-term rate from 0.75% to 1.0%. The central bank officially raised its core inflation forecast for the current fiscal year to 2.8% today while slashing its economic growth projection in half to 0.5%.
EUR/USD Tests 1.1750 Support Ahead of US CPI
The euro slipped 0.25% intraday, pushing EUR/USD down to the 1.1760 mark after gapping lower during the Asian open. The pair failed to break heavy resistance at 1.1800 last week and is currently attempting to stabilize near the 1.1750 support level.
European Central Bank Governing Council member Martin Kocher warned today that an interest rate hike from the current 2.25% target will occur if energy-driven inflation, currently running at 3%, fails to moderate. Outgoing Vice President Luis de Guindos urged prudence ahead of the June 10 to June 11 meeting due to weakening regional growth data.
Traders are aggressively adjusting positions ahead of Tuesday's US CPI release. Consensus estimates project April's headline CPI will jump 0.6% month-over-month and accelerate to 3.8% year-over-year, up from 3.3% in March. Analysts attribute this projected surge to a 19% year-over-year spike in gasoline prices tied directly to the Middle East conflict. Core CPI, excluding food and energy, is forecast to increase by 0.3% month-over-month.
Bank of America analysts revised their forecasts today, predicting the Federal Reserve will delay any rate cuts until the second half of 2027. They cited stubborn inflation and Friday's Non-farm payrolls report, which showed the US economy added 115,000 jobs in April, crushing the 65,000 estimate. March's job growth was also revised upward to 185,000.
The April unemployment rate held steady at 4.3%, while average hourly earnings rose by a modest 0.2%. The US Senate is preparing to confirm Kevin Warsh as the new Federal Reserve Chair this week. He inherits a central bank that recently held the federal funds rate at a target range of 3.50% to 3.75% following a rare, divided 8-4 vote.
Pound Tests 1.3650 While Commodity Currencies Advance
The British pound continues to act as a risk-on beneficiary amid expectations of stable European energy supplies. GBP/USD challenged multi-day peaks near 1.3650 during the European morning before pulling back slightly to trade around 1.3610, down 0.2% on the session. The pair is holding a defined rising channel structure on the hourly charts. The currency is drawing relative strength from the UK's lesser dependence on Middle Eastern oil imports compared to its continental neighbors.
Commodity currencies are tracking the massive crude oil rally. USD/CAD edged up 0.10% to 1.369, showing surprising resilience for the Canadian dollar given the broader US dollar strength. US West Texas Intermediate crude mirrored the Brent rally, climbing $4.57 to hit $98.51 per barrel.
The Australian dollar also saw significant positioning shifts. The COT report revealed that net longs on AUD/USD were lifted by 6.8k contracts. This pushes speculative positioning near a 13-year high as traders bet on continued strength in raw material exports.
Offshore Yuan Reaches 6.7928 as Silver Surges 6.3%
The offshore Chinese yuan reached its strongest level against the greenback in over three years, trading steadily at 6.7928 yuan per dollar. Chinese producer prices hit a 45-month high today, bolstering the currency alongside optimism ahead of the upcoming Trump-Xi summit in Beijing.
In the broader commodity space, safe-haven flows and inflation hedging sent precious metals soaring. Front-month silver futures experienced a massive breakout, jumping 6.3% to reach $85.49 per troy ounce, marking the metal's fifth consecutive daily advance.
Spot gold continues to trade near all-time highs, hovering between $4,716.64 and $4,731.09 per troy ounce during the London session. Persistent central bank buying and the geopolitical premium from the closed Strait of Hormuz are providing a rigid floor for precious metals. The broader materials sector is rallying as traders price in global shortages. The Middle East conflict, combined with Chinese export restrictions, sent phosphate fertilizer prices soaring today.
Equities Shrug Off Yield Spike on Q1 GDP Data
Despite the hawkish repricing in bond markets, US equities maintained a bid tone. The S&P 500 rose 0.19% to 7,412.94, and the Nasdaq Composite added 0.10% to 26,274.13. Tech sector strength slightly outweighed the drag from surging energy prices. Markets are still digesting the Q1 2026 GDP data released last week, which confirmed the US economy grew at a 2.0% annualized rate. This represents a notable acceleration from the 0.5% growth recorded in Q4 2025.
The primary catalyst keeping the 2.0% GDP growth afloat was a massive 10.4% surge in business fixed investment. Corporate spending on artificial intelligence equipment and software drove this expansion, shielding the broader index from the reality that consumer spending growth slowed to 1.6%.
In individual stock action, Qualcomm shares jumped 7.26% after beating Q2 earnings expectations and confirming imminent data center chip shipments. Conversely, Dollar General stock fell 6.8% as traders worried that its core customers lack the financial cushion to absorb the inflationary impact of $105 oil.
Actionable Levels and Catalysts to Watch
Tuesday's US inflation print will dictate the next major directional move across the forex board. If headline CPI prints at or above the 3.8% consensus, expect immediate upward pressure on US yields as bond markets fully price out any 2026 Fed easing.
For your EUR/USD breakout trading setups, watch the 1.1750 support level closely. A sustained break below this floor on a hot CPI print exposes the 1.1700 psychological handle. Conversely, a softer core inflation reading will likely trigger a short squeeze back toward the 1.1800 resistance zone.
In the USD/JPY pair, the 157.50 level serves as your immediate upside target. With Brent crude firmly above $105, the yen remains fundamentally vulnerable. Monitor the 156.00 level as your primary support and resistance pivot. A drop below 156.00 would require a significant de-escalation in Middle East tensions or a massive downside miss in Tuesday's US inflation data. Keep your position sizing conservative heading into the New York open tomorrow, as the combination of thin liquidity and a high-impact data release guarantees erratic price action.

FN Pulse Editorial Team
Expert Trading Analysts
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