Global Forex & CFD Broker | 1:10,000 Leverage

Mobile Header & Menu
Asian Session 4

Iran Peace Hopes & Hang Seng Surge | Technical Analysis | Capital Street FX Asian Session Brief · 26 May 2026

May 26, 2026
CSFXadmin
Yen Rebound, Iran Peace Hopes & Hang Seng Surge | Capital Street FX Asian Session Brief · 26 May 2026
USD/JPY158.93▲ +0.02%
AUD/USD0.7165▼ −0.11%
NZD/USD0.5985▼ −0.08%
AUD/JPY113.91→ Range
NZD/JPY95.11→ Flat
Hang Seng25,820▲ +0.86%
Nikkei 225Closed→ Holiday
ASX 2008,697▼ −0.37%
CSI 3004,951▲ +1.64%
Gold XAU$4,557▼ −0.42%
WTI Crude$96.60▼ Peace hopes
Brent$103.54▼ −0.62%
BOJ Rate0.75%→ Hold
RBA Rate3.85%→ Hawkish
RBNZ Rate3.25%→ Dovish Hold
JP 10Y JGB1.45%▲ Rising
AU 10Y4.28%→ Stable
USD/JPY158.93▲ +0.02%
AUD/USD0.7165▼ −0.11%
NZD/USD0.5985▼ −0.08%
Hang Seng25,820▲ +0.86%
ASX 2008,697▼ −0.37%
Gold XAU$4,557▼ −0.42%
WTI Crude$96.60▼ Peace hopes
Brent$103.54▼ −0.62%
BOJ Rate0.75%→ Hold
Tuesday, 26 May 2026 · Asian Session · Live Market Brief

Yen Rebound, Iran Peace Hopes
& Hang Seng Surge

USD/JPY 158.93 · AUD/USD 0.7165 · NZD/USD 0.5985 · Hang Seng 25,820
Gold $4,557 · WTI $96.60 · Brent $103.54 · CSI 300 +1.64%
Full Trade Ideas · Live TradingView Charts · Asian Economic Calendar · BOJ / RBA / RBNZ Analysis
Capital Street FX Research | 26 May 2026 | Asian Session Brief | ~16 min read
Asian Session Overview — 26 May 2026

The Tokyo session opens with a yen rebound after three-week lows, oil sliding on US-Iran peace progress, and the Hang Seng outperforming as AI optimism and China’s CSI 300 surge +1.64% set a constructive regional tone — but Japan’s markets are closed for a national holiday.

The dominant narrative across Asian markets today is the easing Iran war premium. WTI crude has fallen more than 8% this week as mediators in Pakistan received an updated Iranian peace proposal and President Trump called off imminent strikes to allow further negotiations. That alone drove a significant unwind in geopolitical risk premia — weakening gold, compressing oil, and partially supporting equities. The yen has caught a sympathy bid as declining oil reduces Japan’s imported inflation burden, with USD/JPY pulling back from three-week highs near 159.30 to trade around 158.93.

Japan itself is on Greenery Day holiday, which drains Tokyo session liquidity significantly. Most JPY flows today will originate from offshore desks in Singapore and Hong Kong. The Bank of Japan held rates at 0.75% at its April 27–28 meeting in a 6-3 split vote, while raising its FY2026 core inflation forecast to 2.8% from 1.9%. Three dissenting members called for an immediate hike to 1.0%, signalling a hawkish undercurrent that continues to support medium-term yen strength. The BOJ–Fed rate gap sits at approximately 275–300bps — still wide enough to sustain carry trade pressure on JPY.

In the commodity bloc, AUD/USD has slipped toward 0.7165 despite a positive China backdrop. Australian consumer inflation expectations eased to 5.6% in May from 5.9%, reducing pressure on the RBA to tighten aggressively. NZD/USD tracks closely at 0.5985, with the RBNZ holding the OCR at 3.25% with a dovish bias. The China angle is critical: the CSI 300’s 1.64% gain provides a tailwind for both commodity currencies, but the softer oil price is a negative offset for Australia’s LNG export revenues. Hang Seng’s 0.86% advance reflects global AI rally momentum and peace deal optimism, with tech and financial heavyweights leading gains.

Live Asian Session Snapshot — 26 May 2026
USD/JPY
158.93
▲ +0.02% · Yen rebounding
AUD/USD
0.7165
▼ −0.11% · Off 0.7180 resist
NZD/USD
0.5985
▼ −0.08% · RBNZ dovish
Hang Seng
25,820
▲ +0.86% · AI rally
Gold XAU
$4,557
▼ −0.42% · Iran deal hopes
WTI Crude
$96.60
▼ −8% wk · Peace progress
Brent Crude
$103.54
▼ −5% wk · Hormuz easing
CSI 300
4,951
▲ +1.64% · China rally
ASX 200
8,697
▼ −0.37% · Resources drag
Nikkei 225
Closed
→ Greenery Day holiday
BOJ Rate
0.75%
→ Hawkish hold (6-3)
US 10Y Yield
3.62%
▼ Risk-off bid

Breaking · Asian Session Headlines

Top Stories Driving Asian Markets

Key developments as of Tokyo / Singapore morning, 26 May 2026

🔴 High Impact · Iran War
US & Iran Signal Progress — WTI Drops 8% in Week
Pakistani mediators confirmed receipt of an updated Iranian peace proposal. Trump called off imminent strikes Monday to allow negotiations. Saudi Aramco CEO warns oil market won’t normalize until 2027 if Hormuz stays blocked past mid-June. WTI now $96.60 after settling near $96 Friday. Brent $103.54, down 5% for the week.
Crude Oil · Geopolitical
🟠 High Impact · BOJ Policy
BOJ Hawkish Hold: Three Members Dissented for 1% Hike
At the April 27–28 meeting, the BOJ kept rates at 0.75% in a 6-3 vote. Dissenters Takata, Tamura, and Nakagawa pushed for immediate hike to 1.0%, citing Iran-driven energy shock. BOJ raised FY2026 core CPI forecast to 2.8% vs 1.9% prior. Japan CPI fell to 1.4% in April — below BOJ’s 2% target for 3rd consecutive month.
BOJ · USD/JPY · Yen
🟢 High Impact · China Markets
Hang Seng +0.86%, CSI 300 +1.64% on AI Rally & Peace Optimism
Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index gained 0.86% to 25,820, lifted by global AI sentiment and hopes for US-Iran deal reducing energy cost burden on Chinese manufacturers. The CSI 300 added 1.64% to 4,951.84. Energy stocks drag offset by tech and financial sector gains. CNOOC and PetroChina weighed on the Hang Seng.
Hang Seng · China · Risk-On
🟠 Medium Impact · Australia
AUD Slips as Inflation Expectations Ease, RBA Hawkish Bias Fades
Australian consumer inflation expectations fell to 5.6% in May from a 3-year high of 5.9% in April. AUD/USD pulled back toward 0.7150–0.7165, eroding prior gains from 0.7180 resistance. RBA remains at 3.85% with hawkish bias, but easing inflation expectations reduce urgency for further hikes. Oil softness is a net negative for Australia’s LNG export revenues.
AUD/USD · RBA · Australia
🟢 Medium Impact · New Zealand
RBNZ Holds OCR at 3.25% — Dovish Bias Keeps Kiwi Pressured
The RBNZ held its Official Cash Rate at 3.25% as widely expected, but maintained a dovish forward guidance tone — further cuts possible if inflation eases. Markets note the RBA-RBNZ differential at 60bps. NZD/USD consolidates near 0.5985 with near-term bias bearish below 0.6050. Upcoming NZ CPI data on June 16 is the next key catalyst.
NZD/USD · RBNZ · Kiwi
🔴 High Impact · Gold
Gold Slides to $4,557 — Iran Peace Progress Erodes Safe-Haven Bid
Gold fell during the Asian session as peace deal hopes drained the geopolitical risk premium. Bears tested $4,480 intraday before prices retraced to $4,550 resistance. 52-week range remains wide: $3,245–$5,595. Fed rate cut probability for June stands at just 2.6% vs 97.4% for unchanged. Central bank buying at 860+ tonnes/year provides structural floor.
Gold · XAU/USD · Safe Haven
“The oil market will take until 2027 to normalize if the Strait of Hormuz stays blocked beyond mid-June.” — Amin Nasser, CEO Saudi Aramco, May 26 2026

Section 1 · Asian Session FX

USD/JPY · AUD/USD · NZD/USD — Trade Setups

JPY pairs lead Asian session turnover (20% of daily volume). Commodity currencies follow Chinese data and risk tone.

US Dollar / Japanese Yen · Tokyo Session Leader
158.93
▼ Rebounding from 3-week lows
▼ Bearish Bias — Hawkish BOJ + Yen Rebound Catalysts Accumulating
BOJ Rate
0.75% (held Apr 28)
Fed Rate
3.50–3.75% (gap ~275bp)
Japan CPI Apr
1.4% (below 2% target)
Short Entry
159.20
Sell rally to resistance
Stop Loss
159.80
Above 3-week high
Take Profit
157.50
Key structural support
USD/JPY — Fibonacci Retracement · Daily
📊 USD/JPY — Fibonacci Retracement · Daily · Daily · CSFX Research · TradingView

Technical Analysis

USD/JPY peaked at 159.31 — a three-week high — before pulling back as declining oil prices and a softer US dollar supported the yen. The pair now trades around 158.93, testing a pivotal zone where multiple technical signals converge: the 50-hour EMA sits at 158.60, and the daily RSI is at 56, trending lower. A rejection at 159.20–159.30 resistance would confirm a bearish reversal pattern. Support levels to watch: 158.40 (yesterday’s Asian session low), then 157.50 (major horizontal support and former breakout zone). Japan’s holiday today means thin liquidity — expect wider spreads and potential for exaggerated intraday moves on any US data surprises.

Fundamental Context

The BOJ’s April meeting revealed a far more hawkish undercurrent than the headline hold suggested. Three board members dissented calling for an immediate 1% hike — the hawkish minority is growing. The central bank also raised its FY2026 core inflation forecast to 2.8%, driven by Iran-war energy price passthrough. Meanwhile Japan’s April CPI fell to 1.4% — below the 2% target — giving the BOJ cover to remain patient in the near term. The 275–300bps rate gap with the Fed continues to weigh on the yen structurally, but any narrowing of this gap — as BOJ hikes and Fed cuts — is the primary USD/JPY bear thesis for 2026. Japan’s Q4 2025 GDP was revised to +0.3% QoQ — a narrow technical recession avoidance. Interventions remain a tail risk; Japanese authorities have signalled tolerance for yen weakness but not accelerating depreciation beyond 160.

Australian Dollar / US Dollar · Commodity Currency
0.7165
▼ −0.11% · Fading 0.7180 resistance
→ Neutral to Slightly Bearish — Caught between China bull + Oil bear
RBA Rate
3.85% (hawkish bias)
52-Week Change
+10.59% YoY
CPI Expectations
5.6% (easing from 5.9%)
Long Entry
0.7120
Buy dip to support
Stop Loss
0.7080
Below April pivot low
Take Profit
0.7220
Near recent highs
AUD/USD — Fibonacci Retracement · Daily
📊 AUD/USD — Fibonacci Retracement · Daily · Daily · CSFX Research · TradingView

Technical Analysis

AUD/USD is edging lower toward 0.7150 in the Asian session, eroding Monday’s gains to the 0.7180 resistance zone amid a modest US Dollar bounce. The pair has posted a bearish outside day on the daily chart, suggesting renewed selling pressure. The 20-day SMA sits at approximately 0.7140 — a critical dynamic support. A hold here opens a recovery toward 0.7220. Below 0.7080 would open a test of the April monthly low around 0.7100. The 4H RSI at 44 gives room to decline further before oversold. Watch for the London open overlap (around 08:00 GMT) to set the directional bias for the next 24 hours.

Fundamental Context

The Aussie faces a tug-of-war between its key fundamental drivers. Bullish factors: RBA’s hawkish stance at 3.85% (with hike potential if CPI re-accelerates), China’s CSI 300 surging 1.64% (Australia’s largest export market), and structural 12-month AUD gains of +10.59%. Bearish factors: Easing Australian inflation expectations (5.6%) reduce RBA urgency, softer oil prices impact LNG export revenues, and a modest USD bounce from one-week lows. The RBA minutes discussed potential rate increases as CPI risks had shifted to the upside — swaps still price modest residual tightening in H2 2026. Watch China’s PMI data (released next week) as the key forward catalyst for AUD direction.

New Zealand Dollar / US Dollar · The Kiwi
0.5985
▼ −0.08% · RBNZ dovish hold weighing
▼ Bearish Bias — RBNZ dovish + USD bounce + Below 0.6050 key level
Short Entry
0.6020
Rally to resistance
Stop Loss
0.6075
Above May high
Take Profit
0.5920
April structural support
NZD/USD — Fibonacci Retracement · Daily
📊 NZD/USD — Fibonacci Retracement · Daily · Daily · CSFX Research · TradingView

Technical Analysis

NZD/USD printed a prominent swing high near 0.6093 in January, and price has since coiled within a consolidation pattern. The near-term bias remains bearish while the pair trades below 0.6050 — a level that coincides with a key VPOC (Volume Point of Control) and the May session high. Rallies to 0.6020 present shorting opportunities against 0.6075 stop. Target is 0.5920 — the April structural support zone. RSI at 41 on the daily chart is trending lower. A break below 0.5940 accelerates toward 0.5900 round-number support. The RBA–RBNZ 60bp rate differential continues to cap NZD/USD relative to AUD/USD.

Fundamental Context

The RBNZ held its Official Cash Rate at 3.25% at the latest meeting, maintaining a cautious dovish bias — further cuts remain on the table if inflation eases. This was the culmination of a 200bps easing cycle that began with three 50bp cuts. Bloomberg pricing estimates both the RBA and RBNZ will cut rates approximately 3.5 more times, but the RBA is expected to lag, keeping the AUD/NZD differential in play. New Zealand’s economy faces headwinds: weak business sentiment, China trade dependency, and elevated mortgage rates biting household consumption. NZ June CPI data (June 16) is the next scheduled major catalyst. US-Iran peace progress reduces NZ’s terms-of-trade energy cost burden — mildly supportive but not enough to shift the bearish technical picture.


Section 2 · Commodities

Gold & WTI Crude — Iran Deal Unwind

Peace progress compresses the geopolitical risk premium — but structural demand keeps floors intact

Spot Gold · Safe Haven + Dedollarization Asset
$4,557
▼ −0.42% · Weekly decline on Iran progress
→ Neutral Range · $4,480–$4,580 — Iran deal pace determines next move
52-Week Range
$3,245 – $5,595
Goldman Target
$4,900 (YE 2026)
Wells Fargo Bull Case
$8,000 / oz
Long Entry
$4,510
At daily open support
Stop Loss
$4,465
Below Asian session low
Take Profit
$4,580
Near-term range top
Gold XAU/USD — Fibonacci Retracement · Daily
📊 Gold XAU/USD — Fibonacci Retracement · Daily · Daily · CSFX Research · TradingView

Technical Analysis

During the Asian session, gold bears tested the $4,480 level before prices retraced toward the $4,550 resistance. The metal is consolidating within a $4,480–$4,580 range — a compression zone following the sharp decline from the $5,595 all-time high. From current levels, further selling pressure and a decline toward $4,500–$4,450 remains possible if the Iran deal gains momentum. A break above $4,580 resistance would lead to a rally toward $4,645–$4,700. The 50-day SMA sits at approximately $4,538 — a critical line that is being tested. The short-term 50-day SMA is estimated to hit $4,538 by late June, per CoinCodex technicals.

Fundamental Context

Three forces are at play in gold today. Bearish for now: Iran peace progress reduces the geopolitical risk premium that drove gold to $5,595, and the Federal Reserve has essentially ruled out a June cut (97.4% probability of hold at 3.50–3.75%). A softening of safe-haven demand as risk appetite improves is the primary near-term headwind. Structurally bullish: Central banks are buying gold at 860+ tonnes/year as a dollar-alternative reserve; Wells Fargo’s bull case targets $8,000/oz citing dedollarization; the 52-week gain of 36.31% reflects deep structural demand. The medium-term bull thesis remains intact — only a full Hormuz reopening and confirmed Fed-on-hold trajectory would threaten the structural case. May 28 US GDP data (preliminary Q1) is the next major catalyst that could reprice Fed expectations.

West Texas Intermediate · NYMEX Front Month
$96.60
▼ −8% WTD · Iran deal progress
▼ Bearish Short-Term — Peace deal compression · Caution on reversal risk
Brent Crude
$103.54 (−5% WTD)
Iran War Impact
+45% since Feb 28
Hormuz Status
Effectively Closed
Short Entry
$98.50
Rally to resistance
Stop Loss
$102.00
Above resistance cluster
Take Profit
$91.00
Pre-war level zone
WTI Crude Oil — Fibonacci Retracement · Daily
📊 WTI Crude Oil — Fibonacci Retracement · Daily · Daily · CSFX Research · TradingView

Technical Analysis

WTI crude has fallen sharply from its peak near $112 (April 2, 2026) as Iran peace deal progress compresses the war premium. The weekly candle shows the largest decline since the conflict began — a potential trend change signal. Key support at $93–$95 (pre-escalation structural zone) is now the primary target if peace talks continue progressing. Resistance on any rally is at $98.50–$101 — the breakdown zone. RSI on the daily has dropped below 40 — approaching oversold territory but not yet at extremes. A failed peace deal would see an immediate reversal toward $107+.

Fundamental Context

The oil market is pricing a peace deal that does not yet exist. Pakistani mediators received Iran’s updated proposal, but President Trump rejected a prior Iranian counteroffer, and the sides remain at loggerheads over Tehran’s enriched uranium stockpile and its claimed authority over the Strait of Hormuz. Citi notes: “Oil prices have been volatile and can rise further if US-Iran dealmaking remains thorny.” Saudi Aramco’s CEO warned the oil market won’t normalize until 2027 if Hormuz stays blocked past mid-June — this underscores the asymmetric risk. Any re-escalation (which remains Dragonfly Intelligence’s base case scenario) would see WTI snap back toward $110+. Use disciplined stop management with leverage on crude positions today — the gap risk from a peace deal headline is significant in both directions. The IEA strategic reserve release (400 million barrels agreed) provides a partial demand buffer.


Section 3 · Asian Index

Hang Seng Index — AI Rally & China Momentum

Hong Kong’s benchmark surges 0.86% as global AI sentiment and peace optimism lift Asia’s premier financial hub

Hong Kong Stock Exchange · 88 Constituent Companies
25,820
▲ +0.86% · AI rally + peace optimism
▲ Cautiously Bullish — China AI + Peace deal tailwinds
CSI 300
4,951 (+1.64%)
Key Sectors
Tech · Financials · Energy
Energy Drag
CNOOC −3.29%
Long Entry
25,550
Buy pullback to support
Stop Loss
25,200
Below structural support
Take Profit
26,400
Recent session high
Hang Seng Index — Fibonacci Retracement · Daily
📊 Hang Seng Index — Fibonacci Retracement · Daily · Daily · CSFX Research · TradingView

Technical Analysis

The Hang Seng Index is trading at 25,820 after gaining 0.86% in today’s session, recovering from recent consolidation near 25,600. The index is approaching the 26,388 resistance level that marked the recent multi-week high. The technical picture is constructive above 25,550 support — a break of this level on a daily close would shift the bias to neutral. The CSI 300’s outperformance (+1.64%) is providing a positive lead for Hong Kong tech and financial names. Energy stocks (CNOOC, PetroChina) remain the primary drag — down 3–4% as oil prices slide on Iran peace progress. A sustained move above 26,400 targets the 27,000 psychological level.

Fundamental Context

The Hang Seng’s advance reflects two distinct catalysts. First, global AI euphoria — semiconductor names and tech heavyweights in Hong Kong are tracking US chip gains (Samsung Electronics hit a record intraday high in Seoul, surging 5.44%, with SK Hynix up 12.52%). Second, Iran peace deal optimism is reducing energy cost pressures on Chinese manufacturers and importers — a meaningful input cost relief for the industrial and consumer sectors. The RBA–RBNZ rate differential, dedollarization flows, and China’s stimulus program all underpin the medium-term case. Key risk: energy stocks constitute a significant chunk of the Hang Seng — if oil prices sharply reverse on peace deal failure, index upside is capped. The S&P 500’s record close (7,473) provides an overnight positive lead. GammaRoad Capital’s CIO describes current market conditions as a “show me” market — investors are buying weakness rather than retreating from it, conditioned by years of resilience through macro shocks.


Asian Session Economic Calendar — 26 May 2026

Today’s Key Asian Session Data Releases

All times in GMT. Japan markets closed (Greenery Day). Next major Japanese data: Tokyo CPI Friday.

Time (GMT) Region Event Impact Previous Forecast Actual
Holiday 🇯🇵Japan Greenery Day — Markets Closed Holiday Closed
00:30 🇦🇺Australia RBA Inflation Expectations (May) Medium 5.9% 5.7% 5.6%
01:00 🇨🇳China CSI 300 Open / Intraday Performance High 4,875 Flat to +0.5% +1.64%
01:30 🇦🇺Australia Westpac Consumer Confidence (May) Medium 93.2 94.0 Pending
02:00 🇳🇿New Zealand ANZ Business Outlook (May) Medium −8.9 −5.0 Pending
04:00 🇸🇬Singapore Industrial Production (Apr YoY) Low +3.2% +2.8% Pending
06:00 🇰🇷South Korea Consumer Confidence Index (May) Low 101.4 102.0 Pending
Upcoming 🇺🇸USA Q1 GDP Preliminary (May 28) High Impact +2.4% +2.1% Wednesday
Upcoming 🇯🇵Japan Tokyo CPI (May) — Fri May 29 High Impact 1.7% (core) 1.8% Friday
Upcoming 🇦🇺Australia Private Capital Expenditure (May 29) Medium +0.8% QoQ +0.5% Friday

Section 4 · Central Bank Fundamentals

BOJ · RBA · RBNZ — Policy Divergence Matrix

Understanding the rate differential landscape that drives Asian session FX

⚠ Key Risk This Week: US Q1 GDP preliminary data (May 28) and Tokyo CPI (May 29) are the two catalysts that could reprice USD/JPY significantly. A GDP miss would strengthen yen; a hot Tokyo CPI would add pressure for BOJ to accelerate tightening timeline.

Bank of Japan (BOJ): The April 27–28 meeting was more hawkish than the headline hold suggested. At 0.75%, the policy rate is the highest in nearly three decades, but the 275–300bps gap with the US Fed remains the primary structural weight on the yen. The 6-3 dissenting vote — with three members calling for immediate hikes to 1.0% — signals that tightening momentum is building inside the committee. Japan’s FY2026 core CPI forecast was raised to 2.8% (from 1.9%), driven by the Iran war energy passthrough. But April’s national CPI of 1.4% (below the 2% target for the third consecutive month) gives the BOJ political cover to remain patient. The medium-term case for yen appreciation is built on yield differential convergence: as the BOJ hikes and the Fed cuts, the gap that has sustained USD/JPY above 150 will gradually compress.

Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA): At 3.85%, the RBA maintains one of the more hawkish stances in the G10. RBA minutes discussed the possibility of rate increases in 2026 if inflation risks escalate. Consumer inflation expectations easing to 5.6% in May reduces the urgency for further action, but markets still price residual tightening potential in H2 2026. AUD’s 10.59% 12-month gain reflects this hawkish premium. The China factor is critical — approximately 35% of Australian exports go to China, making the CSI 300’s performance a leading indicator for AUD/USD direction. The RBA’s next meeting is June 3, with no rate change expected but the tone of the statement will determine AUD trajectory.

Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ): The RBNZ completed an aggressive 200bps easing cycle, bringing the OCR to 3.25%. The central bank holds with a dovish bias — further cuts remain on the table if inflation continues to ease toward target. The RBA–RBNZ 60bp differential has historically supported AUD/NZD upside. Swaps price both central banks cutting approximately 3.5 more times from current levels. NZD/USD remains structurally pressured below 0.6050, with the June CPI release (June 16) as the next pivotal catalyst. The RBNZ’s dovish stance contrasts with the RBA’s hawkish hold, making short NZD/USD and long AUD/NZD the preferred structural trades for the session.


FAQ · Asian Session

Trader Questions — Asian Session Dynamics

Common questions about today’s Asian session themes

Why is Japan’s Nikkei closed today and how does it affect USD/JPY?
Japan observes Greenery Day on May 26, closing the Tokyo Stock Exchange. This drains Tokyo-session liquidity significantly for both equities and yen pairs. USD/JPY flows will be dominated by offshore desks in Singapore, Hong Kong, and Sydney — which tend to be more speculative and less anchored to domestic institutional order flow. In practice, this can lead to wider bid-ask spreads on JPY pairs and more exaggerated intraday moves on any macro headlines. Traders should be cautious with position sizing in thin conditions, and should monitor any US or China headlines that could generate outsized JPY reactions without the usual Tokyo-market liquidity buffer.
What is the connection between oil prices and AUD/USD and NZD/USD?
Both AUD and NZD are commodity currencies — they move in part with commodity price cycles. Australia is a major LNG and coal exporter; lower oil prices reduce its terms of trade. New Zealand’s primary exports are agricultural (dairy), so it has less direct oil exposure but benefits from lower input costs for farming. The AUD/USD and NZD/USD also track China’s economic health — as China’s manufacturing activity rises, commodity demand from its largest trading partner Australia rises, supporting AUD. Today, the CSI 300’s +1.64% gain is a mild positive for both currencies, partially offsetting the oil softness from Iran peace progress.
Why is the Hang Seng rising while energy stocks are falling?
The Hang Seng Index of 88 constituent companies has a diversified sector weighting — financials, technology, and consumer names make up a significant portion alongside energy. Today, the global AI rally (driven by positive US tech earnings and semiconductor momentum from Samsung/SK Hynix in Seoul) is lifting Hong Kong tech and financial names. This positive sector momentum is more than offsetting the drag from CNOOC (−3.29%) and PetroChina (−3.52%), which are falling as WTI crude drops on Iran peace hopes. The CSI 300’s +1.64% broad advance is providing the dominant sentiment tailwind. The net result: a 0.86% index gain despite the energy sector headwinds.
Is gold’s fall on Iran peace progress a buying opportunity or a trend change?
The structural bull case for gold remains intact — central banks are buying at 860+ tonnes/year as a dollar-alternative reserve asset, dedollarization is a multi-year trend, and the Fed is not cutting rates aggressively. The Iran war premium that pushed gold from ~$3,800 to $5,595 is now partially unwinding. But the geopolitical risk premium is only one of several pillars supporting the gold price. We view the $4,480–$4,510 zone as a meaningful value area for long-term accumulation. Short-term traders should wait for a confirmed base — a daily close back above $4,580 with volume is needed to confirm the pullback is over. Use tight stops around $4,460 on any long positions given peace deal volatility risk.
What would make the BOJ hike rates before year-end 2026?
Three conditions would accelerate BOJ tightening: (1) Tokyo or national CPI re-accelerating above 2% — the May Tokyo CPI release on May 29 is closely watched; (2) The yen depreciating rapidly toward or beyond 160, triggering imported inflation alarm; (3) Wage growth data from the spring Shunto negotiations showing sustained 3%+ increases. The BOJ raised its FY2026 core CPI forecast to 2.8% in April — if incoming data confirms this trajectory, the hawkish minority (who already voted for 1.0% in April) will gain more committee support. A September or October 2026 hike to 1.0% is the base case if data cooperates. Any BOJ hike would be profoundly bearish for USD/JPY — a 25bp hike would likely trigger a 3–5 yen appreciation impulse.

Asian Session Playbook — 26 May 2026

The dominant theme is Iran peace deal compression: WTI down 8% on the week, gold sliding from safe-haven highs, and the yen rebounding as lower oil reduces Japan’s imported inflation burden. But complacency is dangerous — the deal is not done, and any re-escalation could snap crude back toward $110+ within a session.

Session priorities: Watch USD/JPY around the 159.00–159.30 resistance zone — a failure here confirms a short setup targeting 157.50. AUD/USD at 0.7165 is caught between China bull and oil bear; buy dips to 0.7120 if China sentiment remains positive. NZD/USD is the structurally weaker commodity currency; short rallies to 0.6020 against 0.6075 stop. Gold at $4,557 — wait for $4,510 before adding longs, stop below $4,460. WTI crude — short rallies to $98.50 but respect the asymmetric peace-deal gap risk.

The Hang Seng’s 0.86% gain, led by AI and financial names, reflects a “show me” market where investors continue buying weakness. With the Nikkei closed today, JPY flows will be thin and prone to spike — adjust position sizing accordingly. May 28 US Q1 GDP and May 29 Tokyo CPI are this week’s key catalysts that will set the next directional leg for all of the above.

Trade Asian Markets →

© 2026 Capital Street FX · Asian Session Brief · 26 May 2026 · Forex · Commodities · Indices

Prices sourced from TradingView live feeds, Trading Economics, CNBC, and Reuters. Disclaimer: This report is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. CFD trading involves significant risk of loss. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Capital Street FX is a regulated broker — please verify licensing with your local financial regulator before trading.