New Fed Chair, Profit-Taking & Trump’s Texas Oil Deal | Capital Street FX Daily Brief · 15 May 2026
New Fed Chair, Profit-Taking
& Trump’s Texas Oil Deal
Gold $4,560 · WTI $102.74 · BTC $78,966 · VIX 18.43
Kevin Warsh Era Begins · Retail Sales Beat · Tech Profit-Taking · Summit Wrap · Full Trade Ideas
Three converging forces are reshaping the US session: Jerome Powell’s final day as Fed Chair and the formal dawn of the Kevin Warsh era, a wave of profit-taking in technology stocks after Thursday’s record-high surge, and Trump’s blockbuster oil deal from Beijing — China has agreed to purchase American crude, sending WTI back above $102 while stocks digest summit-end disappointment.
The S&P 500 opened sharply lower — down nearly 1% — as traders locked in profits after Thursday’s record close of 7,500+. The tech-led selloff is being led by the same names that surged yesterday: Nvidia is down 4%, Intel has retreated 6%, and Cerebras Systems — which debuted with a 68% gain on Thursday — is already giving back gains. The Nasdaq is the worst-performing major index, off 1.35%. Critically, US 10-year Treasury yields have spiked to 4.564%, a decisive move higher that is pressuring rate-sensitive growth equities and pulling gold down sharply by 2.67% to $4,560.
The macro backdrop is paradoxically strong: April Retail Sales printed at +0.5% MoM (beating the +0.2% forecast), confirming the US consumer remains resilient despite 3.8% inflation. The Empire State Manufacturing Index for May surged to 19.6 — far above the 7.0 estimate and its highest level since April 2022. The data argue the economy is too strong for rate cuts, reinforcing the 62% market probability of zero Fed cuts in 2026 and pushing yields higher — a headwind for both equities and gold today.
On geopolitics: the Trump-Xi summit concluded with headlines rather than substance. The standout announcement was Trump’s Fox News interview confirming China will buy US crude — hence oil’s spike. But equity markets are reading the summit’s end with disappointment: no major concessions on tariffs, semiconductors, or Taiwan, leaving the “managed competition” framework largely intact. The VIX has risen 6.76% to 18.43, indicating rising uncertainty. Today’s session will be defined by how far this profit-taking extends in tech and whether rising yields trigger a broader risk-off move into the close.
Six Stories Defining the US Session
Colour-coded by market impact · RED = immediate mover · AMBER = watch · GREEN = positive catalyst
US Session Forex — Trade Setups
Entry · Stop Loss · Take Profit · Technical Analysis · Fundamental Context
Technical Analysis
EUR/USD is now on its fourth consecutive day of losses and has broken through the 1.1667 yearly-open support that had served as a key floor. This is a technically significant breakdown — the 1.1667 level, which also coincided with the 38.2% retracement of the March advance and the 52-week moving average, has now flipped to resistance. The pair is trading at 1.1629, heading toward the next major support cluster at 1.1580 (horizontal structure) and 1.1520 (200-day SMA). The daily RSI is at 38 — approaching oversold but not there yet, leaving room for further downside. The H4 structure shows a clean series of lower highs and lower lows since the 1.1813 rejection.
Fundamental Context
The USD is receiving broad support from two beats today: Retail Sales (+0.5% vs +0.2% forecast) and Empire State Manufacturing (19.6 vs 7.0 estimate). Both argue against any Fed easing in 2026. With Kevin Warsh officially taking over as Fed Chair and his first meeting not until June 16–17, markets are pricing a hawkish hold scenario that is structurally bid for the dollar. On the EUR side, the ECB June hike (85% probability) is already priced. The risk to EUR is a Eurozone GDP downward revision that was released earlier today in the European session. The net EUR/USD setup favours shorts on any rally to 1.1650–1.1667.
Technical Analysis
GBP/USD pulled back from Thursday’s GDP-driven 1.3530 high and is testing the 1.3450–1.3490 support zone. This area coincides with the 20-day EMA and a prior consolidation base. The overall bullish structure from March’s 1.2720 low remains intact as long as 1.3440 holds on a daily close. The 1.3450 zone is the line in the sand: a break below this level on a 4H close would suggest the uptrend is breaking down and open a move toward 1.3350. The Bailey-hawkish reaction from Thursday’s speech provides fundamental underpinning for the current level.
Fundamental Context
Sterling is caught between two forces: the BoE’s relative hawkishness (3.75%, two more hikes priced) which is GBP-supportive, and the broad USD bid from strong US data (Retail Sales, Empire State) which pressures the pair from the USD side. The net result is a holding pattern. GBP/USD is best approached as a buy-the-dip trade at 1.3450 support — the BoE-Fed rate differential still favours GBP on a 1-3 month horizon, making weakness a buy opportunity for patient traders using available leverage.
Technical & Fundamental
USD/JPY is at a critical technical juncture today. A weekly Market Structure High (MSH) sell trigger was established at 158.274 on April 27. However, the bounce off the May 4 low of 155.032 has created a competing Market Structure Low (MSL) trigger. Today’s weekly close will determine which signal dominates: a close above 157.50–158.00 would activate the MSL and push USD/JPY higher toward 159.50–160.414; a close below 156.50 would confirm the MSH and target the 50-week SMA. Rising US 10-year yields (4.564%) argue for USD strength and favour the long side. Japan intervention risk persists above 158.00. Warsh’s hawkish stance on inflation is structurally USD/JPY-bullish via the rate differential — US rates staying higher for longer widens the gap with the BoJ’s modest 0.5% policy rate.
S&P 500 · NASDAQ · Dow Jones — US Session
Thursday’s record highs are giving way to Friday profit-taking as yields spike and the summit ends
Technical Analysis
The S&P 500 reached an all-time high above 7,500 on Thursday, led by Cisco’s AI infrastructure blowout and Nvidia’s Huang Jensen China chip approval surge. Today’s profit-taking is entirely expected after such a vertical move. The structure remains bullish on the daily and weekly timeframes: higher highs, higher lows, with the 20-day EMA now at approximately 7,280 acting as the dynamic support floor. A pullback to 7,350 — the prior breakout zone — is a healthy and tradeable dip. The risk is that the yield spike (10-year at 4.564%) becomes disorderly and forces more aggressive de-risking, targeting 7,280 instead. Key watch: if the VIX crosses 20, the selling accelerates.
Fundamental Context
Two competing forces: strong economic data (Retail Sales, Empire State Mfg) argues the US economy is healthy and corporate earnings remain supported — ultimately S&P-positive. But that same strength is why yields are rising, which directly compresses the P/E multiple that has driven the index above 7,500. The resolution of the S&P 500‘s current pullback depends on whether yields stabilise below 4.6% (bullish) or push toward 4.7%+ (bearish for growth stocks). Warsh’s inaugural signal as Fed Chair — expected at some point today or next week — is the macro event that could reset yield expectations in either direction.
Technical & Fundamental
The NASDAQ hit a new all-time high of 26,635 on Thursday, driven by Cisco (+13.4%) and Nvidia (+4.4%). Today’s -1.35% reversal is the largest single-day decline since April. The semiconductor sub-index (SOX) is the epicenter of the selling: Nvidia −4%, Intel −6%, AMD −5%, Micron −5%. This is a classic “sell the news” dynamic after yesterday’s perfect storm of Cisco earnings, H200 chip China approval, and summit optimism. The 25,800 level is the first meaningful technical support — the 20-day EMA and a cluster of horizontal support from the prior consolidation range. Applied Materials reported after Thursday’s close: its results will determine whether the semis selloff deepens or stabilises at the open. Watch for AMAT reaction in early trading.
Gold & WTI — Opposing Forces from the Summit
Technical Analysis
Gold‘s 2.67% decline today is driven by two simultaneous headwinds: the US 10-year yield spike to 4.564% (raising the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding gold) and the USD strengthening on the Retail Sales/Empire State double-beat. The 50-day SMA at approximately $4,620 has been broken to the downside — a technically significant signal. The next key support is $4,500 (major round-number and prior consolidation base). The medium-term bull trend remains intact (central bank buying, Iran war premium, dedollarization thesis), but today’s session favours waiting for yield stabilisation before adding long exposure. If yields reverse below 4.5%, gold will snap back sharply.
Fundamental Context
The structural bull case for gold is unchanged: central banks bought 860+ tonnes in 2025 and are on pace to exceed that in 2026. Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan maintain year-end targets of $4,900–$5,000. Today’s selloff is macro-driven (yield shock) rather than a change in the structural thesis. Silver is selling off even harder (−9.61% to $77.13) — a sign that this is a risk-off, dollar-strength move rather than a gold-specific reversal. Silver’s more industrial character means it’s also caught in the tech selloff narrative. Access precious metals CFDs at Capital Street FX to trade both directions.
Technical Analysis
WTI reversed yesterday’s Hormuz-agreement selloff and is now back above $102 on Trump’s China oil purchase announcement. The daily chart shows a potentially bullish outside reversal candle forming — yesterday’s low is being taken out to the downside, but today’s close looks set to exceed yesterday’s high. The $97–$100 zone is now a strong support band (prior breakout + round number). Above $103.50, the path to $109 opens. The RSI at 62 is back in bullish territory and has recovered from the near-overbought dip. Crude oil traders should note that Iran peace talks remain a persistent tail risk — any ceasefire announcement would negate the China deal boost and return WTI toward $93–$95.
Fundamental Context
The fundamental picture for crude has become more complex today. The Trump China oil deal is genuinely bullish for US producers (XOM, CVX) and is a direct demand signal from the world’s largest oil importer. However, the Iran ceasefire process continues — Pakistan mediators are active and an updated Iranian proposal is on the table. The net oil balance: China deal (+bullish) vs potential Iran peace (-bearish). Saudi Aramco CEO warning that markets won’t normalise until 2027 remains the structural reference point. For the US session, energy stocks (XOM, CVX, COP) are the only sector in positive territory today.
Bitcoin & Crypto — Warsh Day One: What Happens Next?
Technical Analysis
Bitcoin is pressing against its 200-day SMA near $78,000 — the most critical support level on the chart. Every previous Fed Chair transition since 2014 has been accompanied by a significant BTC selloff: Yellen (−86%), Powell first term (−73.56%), Powell second term (−60.72%). Today’s −2.46% move fits this historical pattern. The daily RSI at 40 is in bearish territory. A daily close below $78,000 would be a meaningful technical breakdown triggering accelerated selling toward $75,000 (prior base). Conversely, a rejection at the 200-day SMA and recovery above $80,000 by end of day would signal the historical pattern is breaking — Warsh’s Bitcoin-friendly rhetoric may be providing a floor that previous Fed Chair transitions didn’t have.
Fundamental Context
Today’s BTC trade is a direct function of two competing narratives. Bearish: hot US data (Retail Sales, Empire State) strengthens the case for Fed inaction, US 10-year yields at 4.564% reduce the relative appeal of non-yielding assets, and the historical pattern of BTC selloffs on Fed Chair transitions. Bullish: Warsh described Bitcoin as “the new gold for people under 40,” holds stakes in Flashnet and Bitwise, opposes CBDCs, and backs private stablecoins — the most crypto-literate Fed Chair in history. His first FOMC meeting on June 16–17 is where his actual policy stance will be tested. Until then, the market trades on macro (yields and USD) rather than Warsh’s personal BTC philosophy. Use tighter leverage on crypto during this transition period.
Applied Materials & Key Reactions — May 15, 2026
AMAT reported last night after EU close — semiconductor read-through for Monday
Applied Materials (AMAT) reported Thursday after close. The stock had ±8.7% move priced. AMAT’s guidance on semiconductor equipment orders is the primary read-through for ASML, Infineon, and BE Semiconductor in Europe on Monday. Watch AMAT’s pre-market and open today for the sector direction signal into next week.
| Company | Exchange | Sector | Status | Key Metric / Reaction | Impact | Risk |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Applied Materials (AMAT) | NASDAQ | Semiconductor Equipment | Reported Thu AH | ±8.7% move priced; AI fab orders key metric; read-through for ASML, BESI, Infineon on Monday | HIGH IMPACT | SEMIS |
| Cisco Systems (CSCO) | NASDAQ | AI Infrastructure | Reported Thu AH — BEAT | Revenue +12% YoY; AI orders raised to $9bn FY2026. Stock +13.4% Thursday. Partially giving back gains today. | POSITIVE | AI INFRA |
| Cerebras Systems (CBRS) | NASDAQ | AI Chips (IPO) | IPO Thu — +68% | Debuted Thursday at +68%. Now −4% in early Friday trade. Market cap ~$95bn. First real test of IPO stability. | WATCH | HIGH VOL |
| Deere & Co (DE) | NYSE | Agriculture / Industrial | Reports Today | FY2026 revenue guidance key; Iran war energy cost impact on farm equipment demand; China sales exposure | MEDIUM | MEDIUM |
For European context: Thursday’s European earnings wave — SAP, Roche, Nestlé, Sanofi, STMicro — largely concluded positively, particularly in pharma and semis. The Applied Materials result tonight will determine whether the semiconductor positive momentum carries into next week’s European session across ASML, Infineon, and BE Semiconductor. Access US stocks and indices on Capital Street FX’s platforms.
Today’s Key Events — US Session Dominant
All times in EDT (US Eastern) · High-impact events colour-coded
| Time EDT | Country | Event | Forecast | Previous | Actual | Impact |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 08:30 | 🇺🇸 US | Retail Sales April MoM | +0.2% | +1.6% (rev.) | +0.5% ✅ BEAT | HIGH |
| 08:30 | 🇺🇸 US | Retail Sales Ex-Auto MoM | +0.2% | +0.8% | +0.1% (inline) | MEDIUM |
| 08:30 | 🇺🇸 US | Empire State Mfg Index May | 7.0 | 11.0 | 19.6 ✅ BIG BEAT | HIGH |
| 09:15 | 🇺🇸 US | Industrial Production April MoM | +0.2% | −0.3% | Pending | MEDIUM |
| 10:00 | 🇺🇸 US | Michigan Consumer Sentiment Prelim May | 52.5 | 52.2 | Pending | HIGH |
| 10:00 | 🇺🇸 US | Michigan 1Y Inflation Expectations | 6.5% | 6.5% | 🔴 WATCH | CRITICAL |
| All day | 🇺🇸 Fed | Kevin Warsh — First Day as Fed Chair | Hawkish hold expected | Powell era ends | 🔴 LIVE | CRITICAL |
| All day | 🇨🇳🇺🇸 | Trump-Xi Summit Wrap — Post-Summit Statements | No major deal (priced) | Summit ongoing | China buys US oil ✅ | HIGH |
| After hours | 🇺🇸 US | Applied Materials Q2 2026 Earnings | EPS $2.68 | — | Reported Thu AH — see earnings | SEMIS |
Michigan Inflation Expectations at 10:00 EDT is the session’s sleeper catalyst. If 1-year inflation expectations tick above 6.5% (current level), it will further cement the case for a Fed hold and push yields higher — amplifying today’s risk-off equity and gold selloff. A drop to 6.0% or below would be interpreted as inflation expectations anchoring, giving the market a bullish release valve. This number feeds directly into Warsh’s first policy calculus.
US Session — Full Price Reference
Five Questions Every Trader Is Asking Today
Conclusion: After the Record High, The Reckoning
Thursday’s S&P 500 record close above 7,500 was the culmination of three converging tailwinds: Cisco’s AI blowout, Nvidia’s China chip approval, and Trump-Xi summit optimism. Friday is the unwinding of all three — profit-taking in tech, the summit ending without major breakthroughs, and a yield spike driven by data that is too strong for rate cuts. The result is a session where energy is the only sector in the green, driven by Trump’s China oil announcement, while everything else digests the week’s extraordinary gains.
The defining macro event of the day is Kevin Warsh’s first day as Fed Chair. His “QT-for-Cuts” framework — shrinking the balance sheet while cutting rates — is unprecedented and could move markets significantly when he articulates it publicly. His first FOMC meeting on June 16–17 is the true catalyst, but any Warsh statement today on inflation, rates, or Bitcoin will create intraday price action in the relevant assets. Monitor Fed wires and Bloomberg for any Warsh remarks throughout the afternoon.
For forex traders: EUR/USD below 1.1629 is technically and fundamentally weak — strong US data + hawkish Warsh + ECB June hike already priced = sustained USD bid. GBP/USD’s BoE rate advantage provides a floor at 1.3450; the pair is a buy-the-dip trade, not a breakout chase. The Michigan Inflation Expectations at 10:00 EDT is the session’s remaining major catalyst — if it holds at 6.5% or drops, expect relief across gold, tech, and the broader risk complex. If it prints above 6.5%, extend USD longs and add to commodity shorts.
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