Iran Clock Ticking, Yen Bleeds & Oil Surges | Capital Street FX Asian Session Brief · 18 May 2026
Iran Clock Ticking,
Yen Bleeds & Oil Surges
Nikkei –0.20% · ASX 200 –0.58% · Hang Seng –0.85% · Kospi –1.10%
Risk appetite across the Asia-Pacific is in visible retreat. Australian and Korean equities opened lower, Japan’s Nikkei drifted modestly negative, and the Japanese yen continues its painful slide past 158 per dollar — a level last seen before bouts of government intervention earlier this year. The Bank of Japan held rates steady last Monday while slashing its growth outlook and hiking its inflation forecast to 2.8%, adding to yen vulnerability as the BOJ effectively steps back from its tightening schedule.
US inflation data released mid-week ran hotter than expected, reinforcing a Federal Reserve “higher for longer” narrative and even stoking speculation of a rate hike by December. With US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent having signalled support for Japan’s currency stabilisation efforts but simultaneously expressing wariness of overt intervention, dollar-yen bulls remain in the driving seat for now. Traders are watching 160.00 as the next psychological trigger for MOF action.
Commodity currencies — the Aussie and Kiwi — are under twin pressure from oil-driven risk-off and a stronger US dollar. AUD/USD has settled near 0.7128, weighed by a 0.58% decline in the ASX 200. Gold, despite benefiting from the underlying geopolitical bid, is correcting from recent highs after the US dollar push, now trading near $4,530. This week’s macro calendar brings FOMC minutes (Wednesday), global flash PMIs (Thursday), and University of Michigan sentiment (Friday) — all of which could sharpen the narrative significantly.
Asian Session News Drivers
High-impact stories moving the market during Tokyo / Sydney / Singapore hours
Equity Market Snapshot
Live session performance across major Asia-Pacific exchanges
Asian Session Pair Charts
Price action with entry, stop-loss, and take-profit reference levels for active setups
Active Setups for 18 May 2026
Levels are indicative. Always apply your own risk management. R:R calculated from listed entry.
Week of 18–22 May 2026
High and medium-impact events relevant to Asian session FX pairs
| GMT | Date | Ccy | Impact | Event | Forecast | Prior |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 01:30 | Mon 18 May | AUD | Med | RBA Meeting Minutes | — | — |
| 23:50 | Mon 18 May | JPY | High | Trade Balance (Apr) | ¥–0.42T | ¥–0.28T |
| 01:30 | Tue 19 May | AUD | Med | Wage Price Index (Q1) | +3.2% y/y | +3.4% |
| 18:00 | Wed 20 May | USD | High | FOMC Meeting Minutes | — | — |
| 23:30 | Wed 20 May | JPY | High | National CPI (Apr) | +3.1% y/y | +3.6% |
| 01:30 | Thu 21 May | AUD | High | Employment Change (Apr) | +28.0K | +32.1K |
| 08:30 | Thu 21 May | GBP | High | Flash PMI (May) | 52.8 | 52.5 |
| 13:30 | Thu 21 May | USD | High | Initial Jobless Claims | 220K | 215K |
| 14:00 | Thu 21 May | USD | High | Flash Manufacturing PMI (May) | 52.0 | 52.3 |
| 14:00 | Fri 22 May | USD | High | UoM Consumer Sentiment (May) | 67.0 | 68.6 |
| 01:00 | Fri 22 May | NZD | Med | Retail Sales (Q1) v/v | +0.4% | +0.9% |
What to Watch: Key Themes for the Week
Our research team’s highest-conviction narratives heading into the London open
1. Iran escalation is the dominant risk event. Trump’s weekend messaging has reset geopolitical risk premium higher. Until there is a credible de-escalation signal — unlikely before Thursday at earliest — oil will remain bid and risk-sensitive currencies (AUD, NZD, EM) will remain under pressure. Any denial or clarification from the White House could spark a sharp reversal.
2. The yen is in a critical zone. USD/JPY at 158.77 is approaching territory that has triggered intervention before. The MOF has previously acted without warning, and the political pressure from the US to avoid “excessive” intervention complicates matters. We recommend keeping USD/JPY longs tight — the upside is real but the tail risk is severe. Watch for Bank of Japan speakers and any MOF official statement overnight.
3. FOMC minutes (Wednesday) will define the rate-hike narrative. If the minutes show more hawkish committee members debating active hikes — rather than just pausing cuts — the dollar will extend its rally. This is the week’s macro anchor for all USD crosses.
4. Australian employment data (Thursday) is the week’s AUD flashpoint. A weak print would confirm fears of a slowing labour market amid the energy shock and potentially bring RBA cut speculation back to the table, adding to AUD headwinds. A strong beat offers only brief relief without broader risk-on backdrop support.
5. Bitcoin range compression suggests a directional break is coming. BTC has been coiling between $76,000 and $82,000 since mid-April. The current risk-off environment leans toward a test of $76K support. A close below $75,500 would open up the $72,000 range. Conversely, any Iran ceasefire rumour or US inflation miss could send it back above $82K sharply.