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NFP Eve, Gold Slides & Dollar Firms | Technical Analysis – U.S. Session | 4 June 2026

June 4, 2026
Research Desk
NFP Eve, Gold Slides & Dollar Firms | Capital Street FX U.S. Session Daily Brief · 4 June 2026
USD/CAD1.3903▼ -0.21%
USD/CHF0.7888▼ -0.35%
Gold XAU$4,470▼ -1.64%
Corn ZC422.60¢▼ -0.60%
S&P 5007,572.50▲ +0.47%
JPM$300.50▼ -0.48%
US 10Y4.483%▼ -0.02%
Bitcoin$63,914▼ -2.85%
USDT$1.0002● stable
DXY103.42▲ +0.18%
WTI Crude$94.86▲ +4.10%
VIX15.78▲ +3.00%
USD/CAD1.3903▼ -0.21%
USD/CHF0.7888▼ -0.35%
Gold XAU$4,470▼ -1.64%
Corn ZC422.60¢▼ -0.60%
S&P 5007,572.50▲ +0.47%
JPM$300.50▼ -0.48%
US 10Y4.483%▼ -0.02%
Bitcoin$63,914▼ -2.85%
USDT$1.0002● stable
DXY103.42▲ +0.18%
WTI Crude$94.86▲ +4.10%
VIX15.78▲ +3.00%
Thursday, 4 June 2026 · U.S. Session Brief New York Open

NFP Eve, Gold Slides
& Dollar Firms Ahead
of Payrolls Verdict

USD/CAD 1.3903 · USD/CHF 0.7888 · Gold $4,470/oz · Corn $4.31/bu · S&P 500 7,572.50
JPMorgan $300.50 · US 10Y 4.483% · Bitcoin $63,914 · USDT $1.0002
Analyst: Capital Street FX Research Desk · Session: New York Open, 4 June 2026 · KEY EVENT: Friday May NFP — Forecast +85K · Fed Hold 3.50–3.75% · Next FOMC Jun 16–17
Session Overview · U.S. Markets

Thursday’s U.S. session opens with traders in a defensive crouch: chip stocks are tumbling, Iran geopolitical tension has sent crude oil surging 4%, and all eyes are fixed on Friday’s May Non-Farm Payrolls — the last major data point before the June 16–17 FOMC meeting where the Federal Reserve faces its most closely watched decision in years.

The market’s central tension is a stark one. The Federal Reserve has held rates at 3.50–3.75% for three consecutive meetings — an 8-4 split at the most recent meeting, the most dissent since 1992. Four members favoured a cut, signalling a Fed increasingly at war with itself. The April NFP added 115,000 jobs; Friday’s May print is expected at just 85,000 — historically light, but still the third consecutive month of gains. A soft print below 70,000 could revive cut expectations sharply. A beat above 110,000 cements the Fed’s hold well into Q3.

Meanwhile, WTI crude oil has surged above $94/bbl on renewed Iran conflict concerns — directly weighing on the S&P 500’s consumer-facing sectors while lifting energy stocks. The VIX has ticked up 3% to 15.78 as options traders hedge into the data release. Gold is consolidating near $4,470 — down 1.64% — as sticky U.S. rate expectations reduce the appeal of a non-yielding asset. Bitcoin has shed nearly 3% as the BTC-S&P 500 correlation remains tight at 0.74, falling in sympathy with the Broadcom-led tech selloff. The dollar is modestly firm, keeping USD/CAD near the top of its weekly range at 1.3903 and pressing USD/CHF lower as the Swiss franc holds safe-haven inflows.

S&P 500
7,572.50
▲ +0.47%
Nasdaq Comp.
27,165.88
▲ +0.72%
Dow 30
51,050.76
▲ +0.04%
VIX
15.78
▲ +3.00%
US 10Y Yield
4.483%
▲ +0.52%
WTI Crude
$94.86
▲ +4.10%
DXY
103.42
▲ +0.18%
Gold XAU/USD
$4,470
▼ -1.64%
Bitcoin
$63,914
▼ -2.85%

Section 0 · Breaking News

U.S. Session Headlines — 4 June 2026

Market-moving events as the New York session opens

🔴 Critical · Equities
Broadcom Tumbles Double-Digits, Dragging Chip Sector Lower
Broadcom (AVGO) shares fell sharply after its latest results, setting the stage for broad tech weakness at Thursday’s open. CrowdStrike (CRWD) added to bearish sentiment with a post-earnings plunge, casting doubt on the AI earnings growth narrative.
TECH SELLOFF
🟠 High Impact · Macro
May NFP Preview: Consensus at +85K, Third Straight Monthly Gain
Friday’s nonfarm payrolls report — due 8:30 a.m. ET — carries maximum FOMC weight. Analyst consensus sits at +85,000 jobs, down from April’s 115,000. The unemployment rate is expected at 4.3%. A weak print could revive June cut pricing; a beat could cement a September hold.
EMPLOYMENT · FOMC
🔴 Critical · Geopolitics
Iran Tensions Spike: WTI Crude Surges Above $94, Strait of Hormuz Risk Premium Returns
Renewed escalation in the Iran conflict has sent WTI crude oil up more than 4% to $94.86/bbl. Analysts warn that Strait of Hormuz disruption risk — if materialised — could push crude above $100. This inflationary impulse is the key constraint for the Fed’s ability to cut rates in 2026.
OIL · GEOPOLITICS
🔵 Market Structure
Fed 8-4 Split Confirms Most Dissent Since 1992; Chair Transition Looms
The April FOMC meeting held rates at 3.50-3.75% for a third consecutive time, but the 8-4 dissent in favour of a cut represents the most internal division in 34 years. Chair Powell’s final FOMC meeting has now passed; the June 16-17 meeting marks the transition. Markets price no change at 98% probability.
FEDERAL RESERVE
🟢 Positive Catalyst
Israel-Lebanon Ceasefire Agreed; Consumer Stocks Rally on Yield Slip
An Israel-Lebanon ceasefire agreement lifted consumer-oriented stocks and briefly pulled yields lower Thursday morning. Oil prices, however, remained elevated on separate Iran concerns. The ceasefire provides a selective risk-on signal that has disproportionately benefited defensives and consumer discretionary.
GEOPOLITICS · RISK-ON
🟡 Medium Impact · Digital Assets
Jamie Dimon Opposes Stablecoin Clarity Act as JPMorgan Expands Blockchain Push
JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon is publicly opposing the proposed U.S. Stablecoin Clarity Act, even as the bank deepens its own blockchain infrastructure. Dimon stated blockchain will “replace financial market infrastructure.” The irony is deliberate: JPMorgan wants to lead — not be regulated under consumer stablecoin rules.
FINTECH · CRYPTO POLICY

Section 1 · Foreign Exchange

USD/CAD & USD/CHF — Trade Ideas

Dollar pairs under NFP anticipation and energy-driven divergence

USD/CAD
US Dollar / Canadian Dollar · Oil-Correlated CAD vs Firm USD
1.3903
▼ -0.21% — CAD gaining on surging WTI crude
↓ Tactical Short USD/CAD — Oil Tailwind Supports CAD Near-term
BoC Rate
2.75% (hold stance)
52-Week Range
1.3493 – 1.3948
WTI Crude
$94.86 ▲ +4.10%
Entry (Short)
1.3900
Near weekly high; fade the USD bid
Stop Loss
1.3960
Above 52-week high at 1.3948
Take Profit
1.3780
May support / prior consolidation zone
USDCAD Daily Chart
USD/CAD · Daily Chart · TradingView

Technical Analysis

USD/CAD has surged from a 52-week low of 1.3493 in April 2026 to a high of 1.3948 earlier this week — a near 4.5 cent range driven by combined USD strength and periods of CAD oil-price sensitivity. Today’s session has the pair retreating from those highs at 1.3903 as crude oil’s 4%+ surge provides fundamental CAD support. The pair is trading in the upper quarter of its 2026 range; a daily close below 1.3860 would suggest a more meaningful reversal is underway. Key support is the 1.3780 level — the May 29 low — and below that, the 200-day moving average near 1.3700. Daily RSI has been overbought above 70 in recent sessions and is now retreating to around 62, suggesting momentum may be fading. Resistance is the 1.3948 high, then the psychological 1.4000 level.

Fundamental Context

The USD/CAD relationship is fundamentally a tug-of-war between a firm U.S. dollar — supported by sticky U.S. inflation, a divided but holding Fed at 3.50-3.75%, and elevated Treasury yields — and the Canadian dollar’s powerful structural link to crude oil prices. WTI crude at $94.86/bbl is a meaningful CAD positive; historically, every $5 move in WTI correlates with roughly a 1–1.5 cent move in USD/CAD. The Bank of Canada holds its benchmark rate at 2.75% — well below the Fed’s upper bound — which creates a structural interest rate differential favouring the U.S. dollar. The key tactical event is Friday’s U.S. NFP: a weak print that revives Fed cut expectations would be the most powerful USD/CAD downside catalyst available. A strong print cements USD strength and could push the pair back toward 1.3940–1.3950.

USD/CHF
US Dollar / Swiss Franc · Safe-Haven Bid Compressing USD/CHF
0.7888
▼ -0.35% — CHF safe-haven inflows accelerate
↓ Bearish USD/CHF — CHF Safe-Haven + SNB Rate Gap Provides Structural Downside
SNB Rate
0.50% (negative real)
52-Week Range
0.7604 – 0.8252
1-Year Change
-5.03% (CHF strengthening)
Entry (Short)
0.7905
Intraday bounce into resistance
Stop Loss
0.7950
Above prior week’s resistance
Take Profit
0.7800
Near recent low support zone
USDCHF Daily Chart
USD/CHF · Daily Chart · TradingView

Technical Analysis

USD/CHF has been in a broad downtrend throughout 2026, falling from a high of 0.8252 to a 52-week low of 0.7604 — a decline of nearly 6.5 cents, or 7.9%. The pair is currently trading at 0.7888, in the lower third of its annual range. The 5.03% year-over-year decline in the pair reflects persistent Swiss franc appreciation driven by safe-haven demand and Switzerland’s current account surplus. The downward trend channel remains intact; key resistance sits at 0.7917 (the prior month’s level), then 0.7950 (short-term bounce target), then 0.8000 (major psychological level). Support is 0.7840 (recent intraday lows), then 0.7700, and the 52-week low of 0.7604 as the structural floor.

Fundamental Context

The Swiss franc is one of the most reliable safe-haven currencies in the world, and geopolitical risk elevations — Iran conflict, Middle East tensions, and now renewed equity volatility from the Broadcom earnings shock — are consistently driving CHF inflows. The SNB’s 0.50% rate sits far below the Fed’s 3.75% upper band, which theoretically favours the USD; yet in practice, the current geopolitical environment overrides rate differentials in favour of CHF as a crisis currency. Switzerland’s structural trade surplus and gold-backed monetary credibility make the franc an institutional safe harbour. Friday’s NFP is the swing factor: weak data would simultaneously weaken the USD and reduce risk appetite, a double CHF-positive. Strong data would lift USD and reduce global uncertainty, providing the most realistic path to a short-term USD/CHF bounce toward 0.7950–0.8000.


Section 2 · Commodities

Gold & Corn — Trade Ideas

Precious metals under rate pressure; agricultural supply surplus weighs on grains

Gold XAU/USD
Spot Gold · USD per Troy Ounce · Record ATH $5,602 Jan 2026
$4,470.83
▼ -1.64% — Hawkish rate expectations cap safe-haven bid
→ Neutral-to-Bearish — Rate Headwinds vs. Geopolitical Floor; Watch NFP for Direction
ATH (Jan 28, 2026)
$5,602.22
Fed Rate
3.50–3.75% (hold)
From ATH
-20.2% (correction)
Entry (Long)
$4,420
Buy dip to March support cluster
Stop Loss
$4,360
Below recent consolidation floor
Take Profit
$4,580
Resistance at May swing high
GOLD Daily Chart
Gold XAU/USD · Daily Chart · TradingView

Technical Analysis

Gold reached a historic all-time high of $5,602.22 on January 28, 2026, driven by peak safe-haven demand at the outset of the Iran conflict. The metal has since corrected by over 20% to current levels near $4,470 — a significant pullback consistent with the repricing of Federal Reserve rate expectations higher. The current level sits just below the $4,500 psychological resistance, with the declining 20-day moving average near $4,540 also capping rallies. A breach below $4,360 — the March consolidation floor — would signal a deeper move toward $4,200–4,250. Conversely, a soft NFP on Friday that reignites cut expectations could trigger a sharp reversal toward $4,580; gold historically rallies 2–3% on dovish Fed surprises. The RSI at approximately 42 is neutral-to-bearish, showing no oversold condition that would automatically attract buyers.

Fundamental Context

Gold’s paradox is stark in the current environment. On one hand, Iran geopolitical risk, equity market volatility (VIX at 15.78), and a globally uncertain macro backdrop are classic safe-haven drivers for the metal. On the other hand, the Federal Reserve holding rates at 3.50-3.75% — and the market pricing near-zero probability of a June cut — makes the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding gold exceptionally high. With the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield at 4.483%, real yields remain positive, which historically suppresses gold. The metal is further weighed by a modestly firm dollar (DXY 103.42). The actionable catalyst is Friday’s NFP: a sub-70,000 print would dramatically revive cut expectations and almost certainly drive a gold rally. A beat above 110,000 would further suppress gold through the summer. Central bank buying — which has been a structural gold floor throughout 2025-2026 — remains supportive but insufficient to overcome the rate headwind alone.

Corn ZC — CBOT Futures
Chicago Board of Trade · Cents per Bushel (5,000 bu contract)
422.60¢
▼ -0.60% — 7-week low; bullish supply outlook dominates
↓ Bearish Corn — Favorable Crop Conditions + Ample Global Supply Keep Downside Pressure
USDA Good/Excellent
67% of crop
Planting Progress
93% complete (above 5-yr avg)
Emergence
76% (above normal)
Entry (Short)
428.00¢
Sell rally into overhead resistance
Stop Loss
436.00¢
Above prior consolidation structure
Take Profit
410.00¢
Toward contract low; fresh 2026 low
CORN Daily Chart
Corn ZC Futures · Daily Chart · TradingView

Technical Analysis

CBOT corn futures have been in a sustained downtrend, hitting a fresh seven-week low at 422.60¢/bushel. The July contract has been under consistent selling pressure as crop condition reports come in ahead of expectations. Technical momentum indicators are broadly bearish: the contract has been making lower highs and lower lows on the daily chart since mid-May. The next significant support area is the 420–415¢ zone, which represents the contract low for 2026. Resistance on any bounce is 445–450¢ (the prior consolidation range from late May). The Thursday EIA ethanol data showing a slight bounce in production (to 1.108 million barrels per day) provided minimal support; corn-to-ethanol demand remains a supportive but insufficient counterweight to the bearish supply picture. A weekly close below 428¢ would be technically decisive.

Fundamental Context

The corn market’s fundamental outlook is dominantly bearish heading into summer 2026. U.S. planting is 93% complete — ahead of the five-year average — with emergence at 76%, also above normal. USDA’s crop condition ratings at 67% good-to-excellent, while slightly below consensus expectations, still represent a broadly healthy crop. Warm early-June temperatures and forecast rainfall in the drier western Corn Belt are reinforcing expectations for strong yield potential. The supply picture is reinforced by ample global inventories: large old-crop U.S. stocks and strong South American harvest expectations continue to weigh on the demand-driven upside. The one wildcard is the oil market: WTI crude above $94/bbl theoretically boosts corn’s biofuel demand channel via ethanol, but in practice this effect has been “limited” given the dominance of supply-side factors per recent market data. Thursday’s export sale of 136,000 MT of corn to South Korea was mildly positive but insufficient to reverse the trend.


Section 3 · Equities

S&P 500 & JPMorgan Chase — Trade Ideas

Index navigates chip selloff while financials face NFP-rate binary

S&P 500 Index
SPX · U.S. Large Cap Benchmark · Cash Index
7,572.50
▲ +0.47% — Rising despite chip selloff; energy sector offsetting
→ Cautiously Bullish — Tech Headwind vs. Energy Tailwind; NFP Binary Risk Friday
Fed Funds Rate
3.50–3.75% (hold)
Q1 2026 GDP
+2.0% annualised
VIX
15.78 (elevated)
Entry (Long)
7,570
Buy dip to intraday support
Stop Loss
7,490
Below May 30 structural support
Take Profit
7,750
Post-NFP relief rally target
SPX Daily Chart
S&P 500 · Daily Chart · TradingView

Technical Analysis

The S&P 500 is showing resilience at 7,572.50, recovering from early session weakness driven by Broadcom’s double-digit fall. The index has been in a broadly constructive uptrend since Q1 2026, recovering from Iran-war lows. Key technical support sits at the 7,490–7,500 zone (the 50-day EMA and May structural low cluster). Resistance is near 7,750 — the recent intraday high. The daily RSI near 55 suggests neutral-to-mildly bullish momentum with room to run on the upside. However, tomorrow’s NFP introduces a significant binary risk: a soft print could drive a relief rally toward 7,750–7,800 if it opens the door for Fed cuts; a hard beat in jobs growth would likely compress valuations under the weight of extended “higher for longer” rates, testing the 7,490 support. The VIX at 15.78 (up 3%) reflects options market hedging into the event.

Fundamental Context

The S&P 500’s current level at 7,572 represents a market navigating significant crosscurrents. U.S. Q1 GDP grew at 2.0% annualised — solid but showing signs of pressure from elevated borrowing costs. The Fed’s 3.50–3.75% hold for three consecutive meetings is the dominant overhang on equity valuations: the standard DCF models simply cannot justify current multiples if rates stay above 3.5% into 2027. The 8-4 FOMC dissent signals growing internal pressure toward cuts, which is equity-positive — but the FOMC will not cut preemptively without data cover. Energy stocks (WTI above $94) are providing a sector-level tailwind, partially offsetting the Broadcom-led chip sector weakness. The actionable risk/reward skew is asymmetric into NFP: a weak print is a more powerful bull catalyst than a strong print is a bear catalyst, because markets have already substantially priced the hold scenario.

JPMorgan Chase & Co.
NYSE: JPM · World’s Largest Bank by Market Cap, 2026
$300.50
▼ -0.48% — Retreating from $301.96 session high
→ Neutral with Bullish Rate Bias — JPM Benefits from “Higher for Longer”; NFP is Binary Catalyst
52-Week Range
$260.31 – $337.25
Today’s Range
$296.56 – $301.96
Volume vs Avg
6.91M vs 9.07M avg
Entry (Long)
$296.50
At today’s session low support
Stop Loss
$290.00
Below major May support
Take Profit
$315.00
Toward June swing high target
JPM Daily Chart
JPMorgan Chase (JPM) · Daily Chart · TradingView

Technical Analysis

JPMorgan Chase is trading at $300.50 after reaching an intraday high of $301.96 and finding sellers. The $300 level is both a psychological anchor and a near-term pivot: the stock has oscillated around this level for the past two weeks, suggesting a market in balance awaiting the NFP catalyst. The 52-week range of $260.31 to $337.25 gives context: JPM is trading in the lower-middle of its annual range, significantly off the highs. The 50-day moving average likely sits near $295–298, providing dynamic support. A decisive break above $305 would target $315–320. A close below $296 opens a test of $290. Trading volume at 6.91 million shares is 24% below the 9.07 million share average, suggesting low conviction ahead of Friday’s number.

Fundamental Context

JPMorgan Chase is the world’s largest bank by market capitalisation as of 2026, and its rate sensitivity makes it a direct play on Fed policy. A key structural positive: JPM benefits from higher-for-longer rates because — as an analyst note highlighted — it controls what it pays on deposits while earning wider spreads on loans. The Fed’s 3.50–3.75% hold is therefore operationally constructive for JPM’s net interest margin. CEO Jamie Dimon’s blockchain positioning is strategically important: his simultaneous opposition to the U.S. Stablecoin Clarity Act and expansion of JPMorgan’s own blockchain infrastructure signals the bank intends to dominate institutional digital finance on its own terms. JPMorgan is also scheduled to present at the Morgan Stanley U.S. Financials Conference on June 9 — a near-term catalyst for institutional interest. The NFP risk is two-way: a very weak print that signals recession risk would be net-negative for banks despite opening the door to rate cuts; a moderate soft print (+70–90K) that revives cut expectations without signalling economic distress would be the ideal scenario for JPM.


Section 4 · Fixed Income

US 10-Year Treasury — Trade Idea

The yield curve and NFP’s power to move the 10Y in either direction

US 10Y Treasury
10-Year U.S. Government Bond Yield · Benchmark for Global Risk Pricing
4.483%
▲ +0.52% · 10Y yield approaching 4.50% resistance
↓ Bearish Duration (Rates Higher) — Supply, Sticky Inflation & Fed Hold Keep 10Y Elevated
Fed Funds Upper Bound
3.75%
2Y Yield
~3.94% (spread 54bps)
FOMC Next
June 16–17, 2026
Position (Short Bond)
4.48%
Short TLT / Short ZB futures
Cover at
4.20%
If NFP catalyses dovish reprice
Target Yield
4.70%
Towards prior cycle resistance
US 10Y Treasury Daily Chart
US 10Y Treasury Yield · Daily Chart · TradingView

Technical Analysis

The 10-year U.S. Treasury yield at 4.483% is approaching the psychologically significant 4.50% level. The 10-year yield futures contract (10Y=F) is trading at 4.4830, up 0.52% on the day. This yield level represents a significant compression of the risk premium: the spread between the 10-year yield (4.48%) and the Fed funds upper bound (3.75%) is approximately 73 basis points — historically thin for this stage of a rate cycle, suggesting the market sees very modest additional hikes or cuts ahead. A breakout above 4.50% on the back of a strong NFP could push the 10-year toward 4.65–4.70%. A soft NFP that revives cut expectations could rapidly compress the yield back toward 4.20–4.25% as the bond market prices in a September cut.

Fundamental Context

The U.S. 10-year yield is being shaped by three dominant forces. First, the Federal Reserve’s prolonged hold at 3.50–3.75% anchors front-end rates and limits the upside in long-end yields absent a fresh inflation shock. Second, elevated WTI crude above $94/bbl — driven by Iran conflict risk — is a direct inflationary impulse that could force the 10-year yield higher as the market reassesses the Fed’s willingness to cut. Third, the Iran war’s broader effect on energy prices has already compressed equity multiples and made Treasury bonds more attractive as a risk hedge, creating competing demand from safe-haven buyers that caps yield rises. The net result is a yield essentially rangebound between 4.30% and 4.60% until the macro picture clarifies. Friday’s NFP and the June 16–17 FOMC meeting are the two most powerful near-term catalysts for breaking out of this range decisively.


Section 5 · Digital Assets

Bitcoin & USDT — Trade Ideas

BTC correlation with equities at 0.74; stablecoins under regulatory scrutiny

Bitcoin BTC/USD
Spot Bitcoin · 30-Day Correlation with S&P 500: 0.74
$63,914.00
▼ -2.85% — Tracking Nasdaq lower on Broadcom shock
↓ Bearish Near-Term — High-Beta S&P Correlation; NFP & FOMC Are Binary Events for BTC
ATH (2025)
~$126,000 (-43.3%)
S&P 500 Correlation
0.74 (30-day)
Spot ETF Flows
Recent outflows noted
Entry (Long)
$69,500
Demand zone; prior support cluster
Stop Loss
$66,000
Below March panic low zone
Take Profit
$78,000
Resistance at April swing high
BITCOIN Daily Chart
Bitcoin BTC/USD · Daily Chart · TradingView

Technical Analysis

Bitcoin is trading at $63,914 — down 2.85% on the day — closely tracking Nasdaq futures lower after the Broadcom earnings shock. BTC has fallen approximately 43% from its all-time high of roughly $126,000 reached in 2025, and the 30-day correlation with the S&P 500 at 0.74 means it is effectively behaving as a high-beta equity proxy rather than a “digital gold” safe haven. Key support sits at $69,500 (recent demand zone), then $66,000 (March 2026 panic low area). Resistance on any recovery is $75,000 (the April swing high), then $80,000 (psychological level). The daily chart structure shows lower highs and lower lows since the 2025 ATH — technically a confirmed downtrend. A breach of $66,000 on a daily close basis would be technically decisive and could open a move toward $60,000.

Fundamental Context

Bitcoin’s current macro position is uncomfortable. Its high correlation with the S&P 500 means it suffers when equities sell off (as today), and it does not benefit from safe-haven demand flows the way gold does. The key structural positive is the continued expansion of institutional infrastructure: spot Bitcoin ETF flows, while recently showing outflows, established a critical pipeline of traditional-finance capital. Bitcoin’s market dominance has been rising, suggesting capital within crypto is concentrating in BTC rather than altcoins — a relative flight to quality within digital assets. The actionable catalysts are clear: a weak May NFP and/or dovish Fed signals on June 16–17 would weaken the USD, reduce opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets, and trigger a risk-on rally that disproportionately benefits BTC. An Iran ceasefire would similarly trigger risk-on positioning. Reduce position sizing ahead of the NFP print; the binary outcome range is approximately ±10–15% over 48 hours.

Tether USDT/USD
World’s Largest Stablecoin · $1 USD Peg · Regulatory Binary Ahead
$1.0002
● Peg Stable — De-peg risk from regulatory action is tail risk
→ Neutral (Peg Monitor) — Watch U.S. Stablecoin Clarity Act for Binary Regulatory Risk
Target Peg
$1.0000 (USD)
Current Price
$1.0002 (stable)
Regulatory Event
Stablecoin Clarity Act
Monitor Peg
$1.0000
Stable; no trade signal
De-peg Alert
$0.9950
Stress signal; reduce exposure
Premium Alert
$1.0050
Elevated demand signal for BTC

Context & Regulatory Risk

USDT trades at $1.0002 — essentially at peg. Tether’s USD anchor has remained stable through extraordinary market volatility in 2025-2026, a testament to Tether’s reserve improvements and the deep liquidity of USDT markets. However, USDT faces a significant binary event: the U.S. Stablecoin Clarity Act, which JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon is publicly opposing. This legislation, if passed, would impose consumer-protection-style regulation on stablecoins including Tether — potentially requiring U.S. regulatory licensing, reserve audits, and capital requirements that Tether has historically resisted. USDT’s premium above $1.0000 (currently $1.0002) is actually a mild positive signal: it indicates demand for crypto exposure rather than a flight from the asset. Traders use USDT as a crypto USD equivalent; when USDT trades at a premium, it typically signals accelerating crypto buying interest — a leading indicator for BTC and altcoins. If USDT depeg risks emerge (a move below $0.9950), that would be an extreme stress signal indicating institutional withdrawal from crypto — treat as a hard sell signal across all digital assets.


Section 6 · Economic Calendar

U.S. Session Event Calendar — 4–5 June 2026

All times Eastern (ET). Thursday session and critical Friday NFP data.

Time (ET) Country Event Forecast Previous Impact
Thu 8:30 AM 🇺🇸USA Jobless Claims (weekly) ~235K 233K MEDIUM
Thu 10:00 AM 🇺🇸USA ISM Services PMI (May) 52.5 51.9 MEDIUM
Thu 10:30 AM 🇺🇸USA EIA Crude Oil Inventories MEDIUM
Thu 3:00 PM 🇺🇸USA Consumer Credit (April) $10.1B $8.6B LOW
Fri 8:30 AM ⚡ 🇺🇸USA Non-Farm Payrolls (May) +85,000 +115,000 🔴 CRITICAL
Fri 8:30 AM ⚡ 🇺🇸USA Unemployment Rate (May) 4.3% 4.3% 🔴 HIGH
Fri 8:30 AM ⚡ 🇺🇸USA Average Hourly Earnings (May) +0.3% MoM +0.3% MoM 🔴 HIGH
Fri 10:00 AM 🇺🇸USA University of Michigan Sentiment (prel.) 68.5 67.1 MEDIUM
Fri All Day 🌐Global G7 Finance Ministers Meeting (Day 2) MEDIUM
Jun 9 🇺🇸USA JPMorgan — Morgan Stanley Financials Conference MEDIUM
Jun 16–17 🇺🇸USA FOMC Meeting — Rate Decision & Press Conference Hold 3.50–3.75% Hold (8-4) 🔴 CRITICAL

Analysis FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Clarity on today’s key U.S. market dynamics

Why is the S&P 500 positive even as Broadcom falls double-digits?
The S&P 500’s positive performance (+0.47%) despite a major component’s double-digit drop illustrates the power of sector rotation. Energy stocks — Shell, ExxonMobil, Chevron, and peers — are surging on WTI crude above $94/bbl driven by Iran risk, providing a powerful positive offset to chip sector weakness. Consumer-oriented stocks received a separate boost from the Israel-Lebanon ceasefire news. The index is a GDP-weighted basket: energy’s nominal weighting may be modest, but the magnitude of the price move in crude creates sector returns large enough to counteract even a broad tech selloff. The key risk is if oil prices alone cannot sustain the offset — particularly if tech selling accelerates post-NFP. The VIX at 15.78 (up 3%) tells the true story: options traders are hedging selectively, not capitulating broadly.
What NFP number would trigger a Fed cut at the June 16–17 meeting?
Based on current market pricing and the Fed’s stated data-dependence framework, a single NFP print — even a very weak one — is unlikely to be sufficient to trigger a June cut. Markets currently price a 98% probability of no change at June 16–17. For the calculus to shift, the NFP would need to show a genuinely alarming result: below +50,000 jobs, a meaningful jump in unemployment above 4.5%, and/or a sharp deceleration in wage growth to below +0.1% MoM. Even then, the Fed would also require additional evidence — a soft CPI print, weakening retail sales — before moving. The more realistic scenario is that a weak NFP (+70–85K range) raises the probability of a September cut to 40–50%, reprices the 2-year Treasury yield 15–20bps lower, weakens the USD by 0.5–1%, and lifts gold by 1.5–2%. The Fed funds curve would shift one cut earlier, from December to September. This is the “goldilocks” scenario most constructive for risk assets.
Why is USD/CHF falling when the USD is broadly firm?
USD/CHF’s decline (-0.35%) despite a firm DXY (dollar index up 0.18%) reflects the Swiss franc’s unique safe-haven status and its selective outperformance versus non-CHF currencies. The DXY measures the dollar against a basket of six major currencies dominated by EUR, JPY, GBP, CAD, SEK, and NOK — it does not perfectly capture bilateral USD/CHF dynamics. The CHF has a separate, autonomous safe-haven bid driven by Iran geopolitical risk, equity volatility (VIX up 3%), and Switzerland’s structural current account surplus. When global risk aversion rises — even partially, as today — capital flows into CHF independently of the broader dollar trade. Additionally, the SNB has signalled comfort with a modestly stronger franc as an inflation-control mechanism, which means the central bank is not intervening to cap CHF appreciation. The persistent five-year trend of CHF strengthening reflects deep structural capital flows into Switzerland as a neutral financial haven.
Is Bitcoin’s correlation with the S&P 500 at 0.74 a permanent feature?
The BTC-SPX correlation of 0.74 in early 2026 — the highest since BTC began mass trading — is almost certainly not permanent, but it may persist for longer than crypto bulls expect. Several factors drive the current high correlation: first, the dominance of institutional investors in the BTC spot ETF era means crypto now follows the same risk-appetite cycle as equities; second, the 2026 Iran war macro environment created a broad “risk-off” regime where correlations across assets converge toward 1.0; third, the Fed’s rate policy creates a common discount-rate headwind that suppresses both equity multiples and crypto valuations simultaneously. Historically, BTC correlations with equities have tended to decay during periods of macro stability, crypto-specific catalysts (halvings, regulatory clarity), or when BTC trades like a store-of-value rather than a risk asset. The 2025 ATH of $126,000 was reached partly on a decorrelation from equities — a reminder that the relationship oscillates. The most likely path to decorrelation is an Iran ceasefire (removes the systemic risk overlay) combined with a positive BTC-specific catalyst such as ETF flow acceleration or a favourable FOMC outcome.
Why is corn falling despite crude oil near $95?
The conventional wisdom is that high oil prices support corn prices via the ethanol demand link — higher crude makes corn-derived ethanol more competitive as a blending component, boosting corn demand and prices. This relationship remains structurally valid, but it is being overwhelmed by the supply side in June 2026. U.S. corn planting is 93% complete (ahead of the five-year average), emergence is above normal at 76%, and USDA crop ratings at 67% good-to-excellent signal a broadly healthy crop. Warm early-June temperatures and forecast rainfall in the western Corn Belt are adding to yield optimism. Old-crop U.S. inventories are large, and South American harvest expectations remain robust. The EIA ethanol data does confirm a marginal production bounce, but the direct flow-through to corn demand is limited by refiner input constraints. In short: the oil-corn biofuel link creates a theoretical floor, but when crop conditions are this favorable and global supply is this ample, the supply narrative dominates. The bearish corn position is fundamentally grounded in a supply surplus that crude oil prices alone cannot overcome absent an actual crop failure or export surge.

U.S. Session Summary — 4 June 2026

Thursday’s U.S. session is defined by a single gravitational pull: Friday’s May Non-Farm Payrolls report. Everything else — the Broadcom tech selloff, the oil surge, the USDT peg, the Bitcoin dip — is secondary noise orbiting the NFP event horizon. The Federal Reserve’s 8-4 vote to hold at 3.50–3.75% is the most divided it has been since 1992. That fracture is the market’s central narrative: an institution on the edge of its next move, waiting for data cover.

For traders, the actionable playbook is bifurcated by NFP outcome. Weak NFP scenario (+70K or below): buy gold toward $4,600, sell USD/CAD to 1.3780, cover short USD/CHF above 0.7900, add S&P 500 longs targeting 7,750, and consider tactical BTC longs above $69,500. Strong NFP scenario (+110K or above): sell gold on the bounce, hold USD/CAD near 1.3940, maintain USD/CHF shorts as structural trend persists despite USD strength, reduce equity exposure into VIX spikes, and avoid BTC until the correlation trade unwinds.

Corn remains structurally bearish regardless of NFP: the crop supply story is the dominant variable and no macro data release on Friday changes the planting progress, USDA ratings, or South American supply outlook. JPMorgan at $300.50 is a buy-the-dip candidate for traders who believe the Fed’s higher-for-longer environment structurally benefits money-center banks — watch the June 9 Morgan Stanley Financials Conference presentation as a near-term catalyst. The USDT peg at $1.0002 is stable, but the U.S. Stablecoin Clarity Act remains a tail risk for the entire digital asset ecosystem — monitor legislative progress closely. Position conservatively into NFP. Reduce leverage. Let the data tell the story.

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Capital Street FX · U.S. Session Daily Brief · Thursday, 4 June 2026

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© 2026 Capital Street FX. All market data sourced from live feeds as of the U.S. session open, 4 June 2026. Key sources: Yahoo Finance, Investing.com, Schwab Market Update, TradingEconomics, Wise, MTFX, Barchart, Polymarket, Reuters.