
GBP/USD Plunges 127 Pips to 1.3300 as UK Payrolls Drop 100,000
The British Pound collapsed across the board after a severe contraction in UK employment data slashed Bank of England rate hike bets.
GBP/USD tested the 1.3300 support level during the London session following a massive 100,000 drop in UK payrolls and a spike in unemployment to 5.5%. The weak labor data forced traders to rapidly price out Bank of England tightening expectations.
GBP/USD plunged 127 pips to test the 1.3300 support level during the London session on Tuesday after UK April payrolls contracted by 100,000, pushing the single-month unemployment rate to a 2015-high of 5.5%. Markets immediately aggressively repriced Bank of England rate expectations, scaling back projected year-end tightening to 57 basis points. Wage growth data exacerbated the selloff, slowing to 3.4% against the previous 3.6% reading.
Traders aggressively dumped the British Pound as the deteriorating employment data removed the immediate pressure on the Bank of England to maintain its aggressive tightening cycle. The pair traded in a volatile 1.3300 to 1.3427 range immediately following the Office for National Statistics release. Analysts at major London desks noted the 100,000 drop in payrolls represents a severe economic contraction, fundamentally shifting the macroeconomic outlook for the United Kingdom. When wage growth slows simultaneously with rising unemployment, central banks lose the justification to hold rates at restrictive levels.
Dollar Index Targets 99.50 on Kevin Warsh Confirmation
Institutional flows rotated heavily into the US Dollar Index (DXY) on Tuesday following the Senate confirmation of Kevin Warsh as the next Federal Reserve Chairman. Buying volume surged on expectations of an austere monetary policy regime under his leadership. Analysts project the Dollar Index will quickly climb past the 99.50 level, supported by an anticipated aggressive reduction of the Federal Reserve balance sheet.
Bond market sellers lifted US 10-year Treasury yields to 4.64% during the New York morning session as the Warsh Trade dominated price action. Higher yields systematically drain liquidity from risk assets, prompting a broad market selloff where the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 397 points. A shrinking central bank balance sheet removes dollar liquidity from the global financial system, creating an artificial scarcity that drives up the value of the currency. Forex markets are currently pricing in a sustained period of dollar strength, as the Federal Reserve policy trajectory diverges sharply from the dovish signals emerging from the Bank of England and the European Central Bank.
Selling pressure pushed EUR/USD below the 1.1700 handle as the Euro felt the immediate weight of this dollar strength. The European Central Bank set the daily reference rate at 1.1620, validating the downward trajectory. Market forecasts suggest a near-term return to the 1.1600 support level. Bearish technical setups are targeting further downside price levels at 1.1512 and 1.1430 as the yield differential between US Treasuries and German Bunds continues to widen in favor of the dollar.
USD/JPY Tests 160.00 Intervention Threshold
Heavy institutional selling pressure forced USD/JPY to test the critical 160.00 intervention threshold during Asian trade. The Yen failed to catch any bid despite stronger-than-expected Japanese gross domestic product data released earlier in the week. Rising global oil prices and the surge in US Treasury yields to 4.64% completely overwhelmed the positive domestic growth metrics, leaving the currency defenseless against capital outflows.
Currency strategists warn that if the Bank of Japan and the Ministry of Finance fail to intervene at the 160.00 line, the path is open for the pair to quickly push toward the 160.60 to 160.70 range. Traders are aggressively testing the resolve of Japanese officials. A failure to deploy foreign exchange reserves here signals a tolerance for further Yen depreciation, which directly impacts import costs for the resource-poor nation. For further context on trading these specific levels, review our USD/JPY analysis.
Geopolitical Pause Pulls Brent Crude Down to 110.22 Dollars
Forex and commodity markets entered a volatile holding pattern after US President Trump announced a two-to-three-day postponement of a scheduled military strike on Iran to allow for peace negotiations. Brent crude fell 1.68% to $110.22 per barrel, while US West Texas Intermediate crude dropped 41 cents to trade around $103.97 per barrel. Prices remain firmly above the $100 threshold due to ongoing shipping blockades in the Strait of Hormuz.
Safe-haven assets reacted immediately to the delayed military action. Spot gold slipped 0.78% to $4,531.13 per ounce, and COMEX gold futures declined 0.37% to $4,541 per ounce. Stronger US cpi" title="Understanding inflation and CPI in forex">inflation data and high Treasury yields eroded hopes for Federal Reserve rate cuts, pressuring the non-yielding precious metal. Silver took a steeper hit, dropping 2.28% to $75.95 per troy ounce after a UBS report cut its full-year silver investment demand forecast and projected a narrower global supply deficit.
Base metals also faced headwinds, with copper falling 1.17% to $6.20 per pound on softer factory output data from China. The broader GSCI Commodity Index dropped 0.73% to 759.78 points, though it remains up 41.68% year-over-year.
Emerging market currencies faced their own isolated shocks, most notably the Brazilian Real. USD/BRL surged as the Real suffered its largest depreciation against the US Dollar since October 2025. The sharp 5% selloff was triggered by leaked recordings implicating presidential candidate Flavio Bolsonaro in a scandal involving over $25 million in questionable transactions with a former bank chief executive officer. The political instability immediately triggered capital flight from Brazilian assets.
Key Technical Levels and Upcoming Catalysts
To trade these volatile moves effectively, you must monitor specific support and resistance levels across the major pairs over the next 48 hours. The macroeconomic environment is shifting rapidly, requiring precise entry and exit parameters.
- GBP/USD: You should watch the 1.3300 floor closely. A sustained hourly close below this level opens the door to 1.3245. Resistance now sits at the pre-data breakdown level of 1.3427.
- USD/JPY: The 160.00 handle is the absolute focal point. If you are long, trailing stops are essential as Ministry of Finance intervention could trigger an immediate 200-pip downward spike. Upside targets sit at 160.60.
- EUR/USD: Downside momentum targets 1.1600. If sellers breach this psychological barrier, your next immediate targets are 1.1512 and 1.1430.
- Dollar Index: The index is targeting 99.50. You should track the US 10-year Treasury yield at 4.64%, as any push toward 4.70% will aggressively accelerate the dollar rally.
Your next major scheduled catalyst is the upcoming Federal Open Market Committee minutes release, which will provide deeper context into the planned balance sheet reduction under the incoming Chairman. You must also monitor news wires continuously for updates on the Iran negotiations, as any breakdown in talks will immediately spike Brent crude back above $115.00 and trigger a massive flight to safety in the US Dollar.

FN Pulse Editorial Team
Expert Trading Analysts
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