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CPI Lands at 4.2% as Iran Escalates & FOMC Looms | Technical Analysis – US Session | 10 June 2026

June 10, 2026
Research Desk
CPI Lands at 4.2% as Iran Escalates & FOMC Looms | Capital Street FX US Session Brief · 10 June 2026
Wednesday, 10 June 2026  ·  US Session Daily Technical Analysis 🇺🇸 LIVE · CPI 4.2% · FOMC 17 JUN · SpaceX IPO 12 JUN

CPI Prints 4.2% as Iran
Strikes Resume & SpaceX IPO Looms

USD/CHF ~0.7988 ▼ · USD/CAD 1.3931 ▲ · Gold ~$4,120 ▼ · Nat Gas ~$3.13 ▼ · Nasdaq ~25,577 ▼ · S&P 500 ~7,358 ▼ · Coca-Cola ~$82.66 · US 10Y ~4.54% · BTC ~$61,919 ▼ · Solana ~$63.70 ▼ · WTI Oil ~$88.88 ▲
Analyst: Capital Street FX Research Desk · Session: New York, 10 June 2026 · LIVE · BREAKING: May CPI +4.2% YoY — highest since Apr 2023 · Energy +23.5%, gasoline +40.5% · Goldman pushes first Fed cut to Jun 2027 · Dec hike fully priced · US launches self-defense strikes on Iran after helicopter downed · Trump: “Iran will pay the price” · Gold -3.3% to ~$4,120 · VIX spikes to 23+ · SpaceX (SPCX) IPO debuts Fri 12 Jun at $135/share, $1.75T valuation · Fed Funds: 3.50–3.75% (hold 17 Jun) · DXY ~99.93 · 10Y TSY 4.54% · VIX ~20.18 ▲ · S&P 500 7,358 ▼ · Nasdaq 25,577 ▼ · Dow 50,746 ▼
Session Overview · Live

The US session opens with the most important macro number of the week already on the tape — May CPI printed exactly at forecast at 4.2% year-over-year, confirming that the Iran-driven energy shock is feeding relentlessly into consumer prices. The result: gold is under sharp pressure, Treasury yields are rising toward the long end, and risk assets are navigating a delicate balance between hot inflation and an FOMC that is still expected to hold on 17 June.

The CPI read — out at 08:30 ET — showed headline inflation accelerating from 3.8% in April to 4.2% in May, the third consecutive monthly acceleration. The energy index surged 23.5% year-over-year with gasoline up 40.5% and fuel oil up 58.9%, a direct consequence of the Hormuz blockade and the resumed US-Iran conflict. Core CPI rose 2.9% annually, matching expectations, and monthly headline came in at 0.5% — slightly below April’s 0.6%, offering a narrow silver lining. Markets are now pricing roughly a 70% probability of a Federal Reserve rate hike by December, even as the June 17th FOMC is seen as a near-certain hold at 3.50–3.75%.

Gold is absorbing the double-whammy of hot data and rising real yields: XAU/USD has slid toward $4,168 — down from $4,310 at the European open and well off its April highs — as rising opportunity cost pressures the metal. The US 30-year Treasury yield is approaching 5.10%, a level that historically stresses leveraged long positions across the yield curve. Nasdaq 100 futures are trading around 29,557 — rangebound and watchful — as tech stocks weigh rate-hike probability against an AI-spending pipeline that has not slowed. Open a live account to trade the US session.

🔴 LIVE DATA — May CPI Released 08:30 ET, 10 June 2026: Headline CPI +4.2% YoY (exp. 4.2%, prev. 3.8%) · MoM +0.5% (prev. +0.6%) · Core CPI +2.9% YoY (exp. 2.9%) · Core MoM +0.2% (below 0.3% forecast) · Energy +23.5% YoY · Gasoline +40.5% · Next CPI: 14 July 2026
USD/CHF
0.7988
▼ CHF safe-haven
USD/CAD
1.3931
▲ oil-CAD diverge
Gold (XAU/USD)
~$4,120
▼ -3.3% Iran+CPI
Natural Gas
~$3.13
▼ -0.3% off highs
Nasdaq
25,577
▼ -1.36%
S&P 500
7,358
▼ -0.64%
Coca-Cola (KO)
$82.66
▲ defensive bid
WTI Oil
$88.88
▲ Iran strikes
US 10Y Yield
~4.54%
▲ CPI repricing
VIX
20.18
▲ +6.7% spike
BTC/USD
$61,919
▼ -2.3% 24h
Solana (SOL)
$63.70
▼ -4.25% 24h

Section 0 · Breaking News

US Session Headlines — 10 June 2026

Live market-moving events as CPI lands in line, Iran strikes resume, Goldman scraps 2026 cut forecast, SpaceX IPO days away, and New York trading deteriorates

🔴 Critical · Inflation — LIVE DATA
May CPI +4.2% YoY — Three-Year High; Core Surprise Below 0.3% Gives Narrow Relief
BLS confirmed at 08:30 ET: headline CPI +4.2% YoY (vs. 3.8% April) and +0.5% MoM. Energy +23.5% YoY (gasoline +40.5%, fuel oil +58.9%). Crucially, core CPI MoM printed +0.2% — below the 0.3% forecast — with shelter costs rising 0.3% (half April’s gain) and transportation services falling 0.6%. Morgan Stanley: “Inflation remains well above target.” Edward Jones: energy supply shock “may peak this quarter.” Oxford Economics: “May could mark the CPI peak.” Markets slightly scaled back near-term hike bets on the core undershoot but December hike remains fully priced. S&P 500 futures fell ~0.5% on the release before partially recovering.
CPI · INFLATION · FED · ENERGY SHOCK
🟠 Critical · Geopolitics — BREAKING
US Launches “Self-Defense” Strikes After Iran Downs Army Helicopter — Trump: “Iran Will Pay”
US Central Command launched overnight strikes against Iranian targets after an Apache helicopter was struck by an Iranian drone over the Strait of Hormuz (June 9 PM ET). Iran’s Foreign Minister Araghchi warned “Iran’s armed forces will leave no attack unanswered.” Trump stated: “Iran will have to pay the price.” The April ceasefire is functionally collapsed; the Hormuz blockade remains active, sustaining the energy shock underpinning 4.2% CPI. Peace deal odds on Polymarket: June-15 outcome 9%, June-30 18%. Oil: WTI ~$88.88 ▲, Brent ~$92.18 ▲.
IRAN · HORMUZ · STRIKES · OIL RISK
🔵 High Impact · Goldman & Fed
Goldman Sachs Drops All 2026 Rate-Cut Forecasts; Pushes First Cut to June 2027
In a note dated June 7 and now confirmed by CPI, Goldman chief US economist David Mericle stated the bank “no longer expects the Fed to cut interest rates this year.” The final two cuts in the cycle are now pushed to June and December 2027. Goldman cited the stronger-than-expected May jobs report (172,000 vs. expectations) and the accelerating energy-driven inflation path. Citi still forecasts multiple cuts; Wall Street is split. Fed funds futures now price a hike as more likely than a cut before year-end — a full reversal from the January baseline. June 17 FOMC: hold at 3.50–3.75% unanimous expectation; the hawkish message will dominate. Fed Chair Warsh may scrap the dot plot at this meeting.
GOLDMAN · FED · RATE HIKE · FOMC
🔴 High Impact · Markets
Gold Falls to ~$4,120 — Down 3.3% on Day, Lowest Since Late November 2025; VIX Spikes to 23+
Gold extended its decline for a fourth consecutive session, hitting ~$4,119 (TradingEconomics: $4,119.73, down 3.32%) — the lowest since late November 2025. RSI at 24.6 signals extreme oversold conditions per Investing.com. The VIX surged intraday to 23.34 (from 18.92 close) before settling near 20.18. Stocks broadly lower: S&P 500 -0.64% (7,358), Nasdaq -1.36% (25,577), Dow -0.08% (50,746). Notably, 62.7% of US issues are still advancing (broad market breadth), limiting the damage to index-level concentrated tech selling.
GOLD · VIX · EQUITIES · REAL YIELDS
🟢 High Impact · IPO
SpaceX (SPCX) Prices at $135/Share for Friday Nasdaq Debut — Largest IPO in History at $1.75T
SpaceX is set to debut on Nasdaq as SPCX on Friday June 12 — the largest IPO in history at a $1.75 trillion valuation, raising $75 billion. Goldman Sachs leads as bookrunner. Goldman projects SpaceX’s AI/Starlink revenue to surge to $474B by 2030. Prediction markets: 98% probability of listing by June 30. The IPO is a significant cross-asset event: a successful debut would absorb institutional capital that might otherwise bid risk assets, and a weak open could amplify the current equity selloff. CPI-driven rate-hike repricing creates IPO-day headwinds for growth-multiple pricing.
SPACEX · SPCX · IPO · NASDAQ
🟠 Medium Impact · Crypto
Bitcoin ~$61,919 (-2.3%); ETF Outflows Continue — Solana Holds $62 Structural Floor
Bitcoin fell alongside broader risk assets as fresh Iran military action pressured markets. Strategy Inc. CEO Le Phong sold 5,522 MSTR shares June 9; Coinbase Chief Accounting Officer also sold shares — insider selling adds near-term headwind. Bitcoin ETF inflows turned outflow for second consecutive day. Solana holds $63.70 with the institutional $62 floor intact (Bitwise BSOL, Fidelity FSOL ETFs; Forward Industries 6.9M SOL treasury position). CoinDesk pre-market headline: “The inflation scenario that could send bitcoin tumbling below $60,000.” The $60K support remains the structural line that changes the macro narrative for crypto.
BITCOIN · SOLANA · ETF · CRYPTO

Section 1 · Economic Calendar

US Session Data — 10–18 June 2026

Key US releases and event risks through this week’s CPI – FOMC – PPI window (times in ET)

Time (ET) Region Event Actual / Forecast Previous Impact
Wed 08:30 ✅ 🇺🇸US CPI May (YoY / MoM) 4.2% / +0.5% ✅ In-line 3.8% / +0.6% CRITICAL · LIVE
Wed 08:30 ✅ 🇺🇸US Core CPI May (YoY / MoM) 2.9% / +0.2% ✅ Core beat 2.6% / +0.3% HIGH · LIVE
Wed 10:30 🇺🇸US EIA Weekly Natural Gas Storage +98 bcf MEDIUM
Wed 11:00 🇺🇸US EIA Crude Oil Inventories (Weekly) -2.5M bbl MEDIUM
Wed 13:00 🇺🇸US 30-Year Treasury Bond Auction ~5.08% HIGH
Thu 11 Jun 08:30 🇺🇸US PPI May (MoM / YoY) +0.5% / 3.4% HIGH
Thu 11 Jun 08:30 🇺🇸US Initial Jobless Claims ~225K 219K MEDIUM
Thu 11 Jun 12:15 🇪🇺Euro Area ECB Deposit Rate Decision 2.25% (+25bp expected) 2.00% CRITICAL
Fri 12 Jun 10:00 🇺🇸US Univ. of Michigan Consumer Sentiment (Jun prel.) 52.2 MEDIUM
Tue 17 Jun 14:00 🇺🇸US FOMC Rate Decision & Statement 3.50–3.75% (Hold) 3.50–3.75% CRITICAL
Tue 17 Jun 14:30 🇺🇸US Fed Chair Powell Press Conference HIGH
Thu 18 Jun 07:00 🇬🇧UK BoE Bank Rate Decision 3.75% (Hold) 3.75% MEDIUM

Section 2 · Trade Ideas

US Session Setups — 10 June 2026

Nine instruments; fundamental backdrop, technical levels, and directional bias for the US session and week ahead

USD/CHF
Spot · Dollar Firm on CPI — But CHF Safe-Haven Competes as Iran War Escalates
0.7988
▼ CHF outperforming
USD/CHF Daily Chart
52-Week Range
0.7920–0.9220
Fed Funds Rate
3.50–3.75%
SNB Policy Rate
0.25%
DXY Level
~99.9
EUR/CHF
~0.9220
Direction Bias
NEUTRAL–BEARISH
▼ NEUTRAL-TO-BEARISH USD/CHF — CHF Safe-Haven Bid Drives Pair Lower
Entry (Short)0.8060
Stop Loss0.8140
Take Profit0.7860

Fundamental Backdrop

USD/CHF is in a structural tug-of-war. On one side, the dollar is catching a bid from today’s hot 4.2% CPI print and rising year-end rate-hike odds — the DXY has pushed back toward 99.9. On the other side, the Swiss franc is one of the cleanest safe-haven currencies on the board, and the renewed US-Iran hostilities that snapped the April ceasefire overnight have revived the CHF geopolitical bid. The SNB keeps its policy rate at a dovish 0.25% — a massive 325bp discount to the Fed — which would normally obliterate the franc; but the SNB’s historical record of currency intervention and the franc’s haven status mean that geopolitical escalation episodes regularly override the carry discount. EUR/CHF near 0.9220 reflects the ongoing SNB pressure to resist appreciation, but with Iran war risk re-escalating, the SNB may be less aggressive in selling francs.

Technical Outlook

The pair has been compressing in a 0.7960–0.8080 range after the sharp April dollar-weakness selloff. The 52-week range spans 0.8420–0.9220, and current price sits mid-range. On the topside, 0.8080 capped the most recent rally, with 0.8140 as the stop reference for short positions. The 200-day moving average looms above. A break below 0.7960 support opens 0.7860 and then the 0.7800 zone. The setup is to sell rallies toward 0.8060–0.8080 — the zone where dollar CPI relief meets CHF geopolitical bid. Any sustained Iran de-escalation flips this to a buy, so the bias is conditional on the geopolitical backdrop remaining adversarial.

Session Catalysts

The 30-year Treasury auction at 13:00 ET is the intraday risk: a weak auction (high yield, low bid-to-cover) is dollar-supportive and would pressure USD/CHF shorts. Any official statements from the White House or Tehran on ceasefire talks are the geopolitical wildcard — de-escalation language weakens the CHF, fresh hostility strengthens it. Thursday’s ECB hike matters via EUR/CHF: a hawkish ECB lifts EUR/CHF which in turn exerts modest upward pressure on USD/CHF.

USD/CAD
Spot · Oil-Loonie Decoupling — BoC Policy Divergence Meets Energy Windfall vs. Growth Risk
1.3931
▲ -0.13% on day
USD/CAD Daily Chart
2026 Range
1.3620–1.4200
Fed Funds Rate
3.50–3.75%
BoC Rate
2.75%
WTI Crude
~$90
Brent Crude
~$93
Direction Bias
NEUTRAL–BULLISH
▲ NEUTRAL-TO-BULLISH USD/CAD — BoC Discount + Soft Canadian Data Favours USD
Entry (Long)1.3900
Stop Loss1.3800
Take Profit1.4100

Fundamental Backdrop

USD/CAD at 1.3931 is higher despite crude oil remaining elevated — a classic example of the oil-loonie correlation breaking down under rate differential pressure. The Bank of Canada holds its benchmark rate at 2.75%, a full 75–100bp below the Fed’s 3.50–3.75%, and Canadian economic data has been underwhelming relative to the US: Q1 GDP growth in Canada came in below trend, consumer confidence has been weak in the wake of energy price inflation, and Canadian housing market stress is ongoing at these rate levels. With today’s US CPI landing at 4.2% and reinforcing the view that the Fed will not cut in 2026 and may hike in December, the rate differential that underpins USD/CAD strength is widening rather than narrowing. The one counterweight is oil: WTI near $90 and the Hormuz blockade are a windfall for Canadian energy exporters, which has historically compressed USD/CAD; but that mechanism is being overpowered by rate and growth differentials at present.

Technical Outlook

The pair has built a constructive base at 1.3880–1.3930 over the past week after pulling back from the 1.4200 area. The 1.3880 zone serves as immediate support; a daily close below 1.3800 (the recent swing low) would invalidate the bullish structure and suggest a deeper retest of 1.3700. On the upside, 1.4000 (the round number psychological level) is the first meaningful resistance; above that, 1.4100 and then the 1.4200 year-to-date high open. The setup favours buying dips into 1.3880–1.3900, targeting the 1.4100 handle, with 1.3800 as the stop.

Session Catalysts

Thursday’s Canadian employment data is the near-term catalyst: a weak Canadian jobs print would amplify the BoC-Fed divergence and push USD/CAD toward the 1.4000–1.4100 range. The 30Y Treasury auction at 13:00 ET is intraday risk: a weak auction compresses the dollar, pushing USD/CAD lower. A crude oil breakout above $95 (Brent) on further Iran escalation would provide a short-term loonie cushion — size accordingly and watch the WTI/$90 handle as a real-time sentiment gauge.

Gold (XAU/USD)
Spot · CPI Confirms Inflationary War, But Rising Real Yields Override the Haven Bid
~$4,168
▼ -3%+ post-CPI
Gold XAU/USD Daily Chart
2026 High
~$4,900+
Post-CPI Level
~$4,168
US 10Y Yield
4.57%
US 30Y Yield
~5.10%
DXY
~99.9
Direction Bias
BEARISH SHORT-TERM
▼ BEARISH SHORT-TERM — Sell Rallies Into Rate-Hike Repricing; Support at $4,050
Entry (Short)$4,200
Stop Loss$4,310
Take Profit$4,050

Fundamental Backdrop

Gold’s relationship with the current macro backdrop is genuinely complex, which is why the short-term and structural views diverge sharply. The structural case for gold remains intact: the Iran war is inflationary, central bank demand hit a record 1,231 tonnes in Q1 2026, and private investors accumulated 397.7 tonnes in the first quarter — up 50% year-on-year. But the short-term setup is bearish. Today’s 4.2% CPI print locks the Fed into “higher for longer” and eliminates near-term rate-cut expectations — Goldman Sachs now sees no cuts until 2027. Rising real yields make the opportunity cost of holding gold prohibitively expensive at current levels: the 30-year Treasury near 5.10% is a direct competitor. The sharp selloff from April highs near $4,900+ to current levels of ~$4,168 reflects exactly this repricing — a 15%+ drawdown even as war rages. The lesson: this is an inflationary war, and in inflationary wars, the rate-hike transmission mechanism overwhelms the haven bid.

Technical Outlook

Gold has been in a corrective phase since its April all-time high. The key support zone is $4,050–$4,100, which corresponds to the late-March stabilisation zone. A sustained daily close below $4,050 opens the $3,900–$3,950 range (the February base). On the upside, $4,200 is the immediate pivot; sellers have capped every bounce near this area post-jobs report. Above $4,310 (the European session high) the structure becomes more constructive. The 30Y auction result at 13:00 ET is the intraday tell: a weak auction that drives 30Y yields above 5.20% would accelerate gold selling; a strong auction that caps yields could prompt a relief bounce into $4,200.

Session Catalysts

Three events to watch: (1) 30Y Treasury auction at 13:00 ET — the bond market is the primary driver of gold in the current regime; (2) any further Iran-US escalation headlines — a direct confrontation in the Strait or a broader Gulf attack could revive the haven bid sharply; (3) Powell’s informal communications before the June 17 FOMC blackout period. A de-escalation signal from Washington or Tehran is the clearest upside catalyst for gold into the session close.

Natural Gas (NATGAS)
NYMEX · Rising Channel, Summer Demand vs. Inventory Surplus and LNG Maintenance Drag
~$3.21
▲ +2.27% on day
Natural Gas Daily Chart
Prior Month
~$2.91
YoY Change
-8.14%
1M Change
+10.71%
Lower 48 Supply
108.8 bcfd
LNG Exports (Jun)
16.3 bcfd
Direction Bias
BULLISH (Pullback Buy)
▲ BULLISH — Buy Dips Into $3.00–$3.06 Fib Support; Target $3.27 Swing High
Entry (Long)$3.05
Stop Loss$2.84
Take Profit$3.27

Fundamental Backdrop

Natural gas has been climbing within a rising channel since mid-April, gaining 10.71% over the past month to reach $3.21/MMBtu. The fundamental bull case rests on the summer demand side: weather forecasts point to above-normal temperatures across the continental US through June 24, and the EIA’s own projections call for rising cooling demand. On the supply side, Lower 48 output has dipped slightly to 108.8 bcfd from 109.7 bcfd in May, reducing the surplus pressure. The headwinds are real but bounded: storage remains about 5% above the five-year seasonal average, and LNG export flows have eased to 16.3 bcfd in June from 17.1 bcfd in May due to seasonal maintenance at Golden Pass and Freeport. The 100-day SMA above the 200-day SMA confirms the medium-term uptrend is intact.

Technical Outlook

Price has pulled back from the recent swing high at $3.271 and is now consolidating. The Fibonacci retracement from the April swing low to the $3.271 high places the 38.2% level at $3.106, the 50% at $3.056, and the critical 61.8% at $3.005 — which aligns with the rising channel support. The 100% extension sits at $2.841, the stop reference that would signal trend failure. The RSI is pulling back from overbought territory, and the stochastic still has room to slide, suggesting the correction may not be complete. The disciplined entry is to wait for a test of the $3.005–$3.056 confluence zone, then buy with a stop below $2.84. Target is a resumption toward $3.271 and above.

Session Catalysts

The EIA weekly natural gas storage report at 10:30 ET is the primary intraday catalyst. A storage build below +90 bcf (tighter than consensus) is bullish; a build above +110 bcf is bearish. Temperature forecasts for the next two weeks are the structural driver — any extension of above-normal heat into July amplifies the bull case. LNG export restoration at Golden Pass and Freeport (post-maintenance) would tighten the domestic balance and lift prices toward $3.40+.

Nasdaq 100 (NDX)
Index · AI Crowding Meets Rate-Hike Risk — Holding the Base or Cracking the Support Zone?
29,557
▼ rangebound / soft
Nasdaq 100 Daily Chart
52-Week Range
21,532–30,762
Open (Today)
29,647
Session Volume
70.7M
Fed Dec Hike Odds
~70%
US 10Y Yield
4.57%
Direction Bias
NEUTRAL–BEARISH
▼ NEUTRAL-TO-BEARISH — Sell Rallies Toward 30,000; Hold Below 30,762
Entry (Short)29,900
Stop Loss30,400
Take Profit28,800

Fundamental Backdrop

The Nasdaq 100 is wrestling with two competing forces. The structural bull case — AI capital expenditure from Microsoft, Alphabet, Meta, and NVIDIA is running at record levels, supporting the multi-year earnings story for semi and cloud names — has not changed. But the tactical bear case has strengthened materially with today’s CPI. A 4.2% headline print with a ~70% year-end Fed hike probability raises the long-duration discount rate for every growth stock in the index. JPMorgan traders have explicitly turned cautious, flagging that the AI trade is “so crowded, so capital-hungry, and so aggressively priced that even believers are trimming.” The index is also trading 29,557 against a 52-week high of 30,762 — any decisive break above the recent range would need the rate picture to soften, which requires either a benign CPI surprise (today’s was in-line, not soft) or a clear FOMC dovish tilt.

Technical Outlook

The index opened at 29,647 and has been compressing between 29,329 and 29,805 in recent sessions. The 52-week range is extremely wide (21,532–30,762), putting current price near the upper third. The 30,000 round number is psychologically important resistance; 30,762 is the all-time high stop reference for shorts. Support at 29,329 (the recent day-range low) is the tactical floor — a daily close below here opens 28,500–29,000. The setup is to sell rallies into the 29,900–30,000 zone, targeting 28,800, with a stop above 30,400. The trade is invalidated if FOMC language on June 17 is dovish or if AI earnings guidance materially exceeds expectations.

Session Catalysts

The 30Y Treasury auction at 13:00 ET is the key intraday catalyst — a poor auction that drives long yields to 5.20% accelerates the Nasdaq selloff. After the close, listen for any Fed communications from regional presidents; any dovish signal from a voting member would compress rate-hike odds and provide an immediate relief rally. Thursday’s PPI (08:30 ET) is the next data catalyst: a PPI beat above 3.6% YoY would further entrench the bearish setup heading into the June 17 FOMC.

Coca-Cola (KO)
NYSE · Defensive Staple as Insurance — Earnings Beat, Pricing Power, Geopolitical Resilience
$82.66
▲ +3.92% — 52-Wk High
Coca-Cola KO Daily Chart
52-Week Range
$65.35–$83.00
Q1 2026 EPS
$0.86 (beat $0.81)
Q1 Revenue
$12.5B
Gross Margin
62%
Analyst Tgt (Avg)
$86.06
Direction Bias
BULLISH (Defensive Hold)
▲ BULLISH — Accumulate on Dips; Defensive Hold Into FOMC and Iran Uncertainty
Entry (Long)$81.00
Stop Loss$78.50
Take Profit$86.00

Fundamental Backdrop

Coca-Cola is one of the cleaner defensive opportunities in the current macro environment. Q1 2026 results beat comprehensively: EPS of $0.86 exceeded the $0.81 consensus by 6.17%, revenue of $12.5B beat $12.27B expectations, and organic revenue surged 10% YoY with 3% global unit case volume growth — demonstrating that pricing power is real and not just inflationary pass-through. The company is gaining value share across all major geographic regions, maintaining a 62% gross profit margin despite commodity pressures, and guided positively for the full year. The stock jumped 5.18% on the earnings day and analysts have an average 12-month target of $86.06 — approximately 8% above current levels, with 19 of 20 covering analysts rating it a Buy. The geopolitical environment is a tailwind: consumer staples attract defensive capital flows in risk-off episodes, and the Iran escalation has already driven rotation toward defensive names. The next earnings release is July 28, 2026.

Technical Outlook

KO is trading at $82.66, at the top of its 52-week range of $65.35–$83.00 and in the upper two-thirds of that range. The stock is building on the Q1 earnings-driven rally from the mid-$70s. Key support zones are: $80–$81 (the post-earnings base), $78.50 (the stop reference for longs), and $71–$72 (the pre-earnings level). Resistance is at $82.66 (the 52-week high) and then the analyst consensus target near $86. The strong run to $82.66 may see near-term profit-taking; a pullback to $81.00 provides an entry zone on the open. Short-term technicals are neutral; the daily buy/sell signal is neutral per investing.com, with the medium-term trend constructive on the fundamental rebuild.

Session Catalysts

KO is relatively insulated from today’s CPI directly, but the macro context matters: a sustained equity selloff driven by rate-hike repricing would first hit growth/tech and rotate toward defensives like KO — making today’s session a potential entry point on further weakness. Commodity cost inputs (aluminum for cans, sugar, corn syrup) have been rising with global inflation, which is the principal risk to the 62% gross margin. Monitor commodity futures today alongside the EIA crude and gas data for input cost signals. July 28 earnings are the next major catalyst to position for.

US 30Y Treasury
Bond · Long End Under Pressure — Hot CPI Locks In Hawkish Repricing; 30Y Auction Key
~5.10%
▲ yields rising post-CPI
US 30Y Treasury Daily Chart
52-Week Range
3.90–5.12%
10Y Yield
4.57%
2Y Yield
~4.35%
May CPI YoY
4.2%
Goldman Rate-Cut
Pushed to 2027
Direction Bias
BEARISH (Higher Yields)
▼ BEARISH BOND PRICE / BULLISH YIELD — Sell Bonds Into Rallies; 30Y Targets 5.20%+
Yield Entry (Short Bond)5.05%
Stop (Yield)4.85%
Target (Yield)5.25%

Fundamental Backdrop

The US 30-year Treasury yield is approaching 5.10% — a level tested only twice in the past two decades — and today’s CPI print has added fresh momentum to the bear-bond thesis. Goldman Sachs has explicitly pushed its first rate cut to June 2027, eliminating the last dovish anchor that had been supporting long-duration bonds. The structural case for higher 30Y yields is now three-layered: first, the Fed will stay at 3.50–3.75% through year-end and the 70% probability of a December hike is rising; second, the fiscal trajectory is worsening — the US deficit continues to expand, requiring record Treasury issuance just as the Fed’s QT reduces the Fed’s bond-buying; third, inflation at 4.2% with energy driving three consecutive acceleration months means the long-bond real yield (5.10% minus inflation) is still deeply negative, which is ultimately unsustainable and will force further nominal yield adjustment. The today’s 30Y auction result at 13:00 ET is the single most important data point for the US fixed income market this week.

Technical Outlook

The 30Y yield has been grinding higher from its 3.90% trough earlier in the year. The 5.00% psychological level has been breached; 5.12% was hit briefly in May during the jobs-data repricing, and today’s CPI puts 5.10% back in play. A decisive close above 5.12% opens the 2007 highs above 5.25%. On the downside, 4.85% (the post-June-9 low) is the stop reference — any de-escalation in Iran or a soft Fed communication below that level would signal a bond bear squeeze and stop the short. The yield curve remains inverted at the very short end but is steepening in the 10Y-30Y segment — the “bear steepener” that typically characterises late-cycle inflation regimes.

Session Catalysts

The 13:00 ET 30Y auction is the defining event: demand metrics (bid-to-cover, primary dealer takedown, indirect bidder share) will set the tone for long rates into the FOMC on June 17. A weak auction — low bid-to-cover, high primary dealer takedown — would accelerate the yield rise toward 5.20%+, pressuring equities, gold, and crypto simultaneously. A strong auction would cap the yield move and provide a short-term relief rally in risk assets. Thursday’s PPI and initial claims (08:30 ET) are the next macro test before the FOMC blackout.

BTC/USD (Bitcoin)
Crypto · 5% Treasury Competes for Capital — Institutional Bid Provides the Floor, Yield Pressure the Ceiling
$62,261
▲ +0.76% on day
BTC/USD Daily Chart
24H Volume
$19.31B
Market Cap Rank
#1
30Y Yield
~5.10%
Fed Dec Hike Odds
~70%
Regulatory Status
MiCA + US clarity
Direction Bias
NEUTRAL — Range
— NEUTRAL — Range $61,000–$65,500; 5% Yield Ceiling vs. Institutional Floor
Entry (Long)$60,000
Stop Loss$57,500
Take Profit$67,000

Fundamental Backdrop

Bitcoin at ~$62,261 is navigating the starkest yield-vs.-institutional-adoption tension of the 2026 cycle. The bear case is simple and powerful: a 30-year Treasury yielding 5.10% is an essentially risk-free return that competes directly with every dollar in Bitcoin. Rising real yields raise the opportunity cost of holding a non-yielding asset, and Goldman’s 2027 rate-cut timeline means that headwind has no near-term relief. The crypto market absorbed a punishing repricing after the strong May jobs report, and today’s hot CPI extends that pressure. Yet the structural floor is holding. EU MiCA implementation and US regulatory clarity in 2025-2026 have unlocked compliance-sensitive institutional capital. Bitcoin ETF flows resumed mid-week, and the asset has absorbed the Treasury yield shock at $60,000–$62,000 without breaking down outright — a sign of genuine structural demand. The $60,000 level is the critical technical and psychological floor.

Technical Outlook

Bitcoin is range-trading between $61,000 and $65,500. The 30-year yield shock in May pushed the price to $61,593 at its recent nadir; a sustained break below $60,000 would signal structural breakdown toward the $55,000–$57,500 zone. On the upside, $65,000 is immediate resistance; above $67,000 the structure becomes more constructive for a run toward $70,000+. The trade for the US session is to buy the $60,000 level on any test with a stop at $57,500, targeting $67,000 — a 2:1+ reward-to-risk that respects the institutional floor while acknowledging the yield ceiling.

Session Catalysts

The 30Y auction is the single most important catalyst for Bitcoin today — a weak auction pushes long yields above 5.20% and would accelerate Bitcoin selling toward $59,000–$60,000. Conversely, a strong auction that caps the yield move at 5.10% gives Bitcoin room to recover toward $63,000–$65,000. Any escalation in Iran that reverts risk assets to the geopolitical inflation narrative (rather than the rate-hike repricing) could revive the Bitcoin bid as a digital gold hedge. Thursday’s PPI will be the next binary; a below-consensus PPI (soft pipeline inflation) would be the clearest catalyst for a sustained Bitcoin relief rally into the FOMC.

Solana (SOL/USD)
Crypto · ETF Inflows + Corporate Treasury Adoption vs. $62 Critical Support Test
$63.70
▼ -4.25% 24h
Solana SOL/USD Daily Chart
24H Range
$63.50–$67.22
24H Volume
$2.68B
Market Cap
$37.17B
52-Week Range
$67–$295
SOL ETF AUM
>$1B
Direction Bias
BEARISH SHORT-TERM
▼ BEARISH SHORT-TERM — $62 Floor Critical; Break Below Opens $55–$58 Zone
Entry (Short)$66.00
Stop Loss$70.00
Take Profit$57.00

Fundamental Backdrop

Solana presents a classic case of strong structural fundamentals overwhelmed by near-term macro headwinds. The structural case is genuinely impressive: Solana ETF assets have surpassed $1 billion from Bitwise (BSOL) and Fidelity (FSOL), Morgan Stanley has filed for its own Solana Trust, and Forward Industries (NASDAQ: FORD) now holds over 6.9 million SOL as a corporate treasury asset — the first major corporate treasury strategy beyond Bitcoin for this blockchain. A $1 billion share repurchase program supports the equity-side enthusiasm. The network has also pioneered public equity tokenisation: Galaxy Digital tokenised its Class A stock on Solana in September 2025. Yet Solana at $63.70 is down 52% over the past year (52-week range $67–$295), reflecting the brutal high-beta unwinding from speculative peak levels. In a rising-yield environment, Solana is the highest-beta, most liquidity-dependent asset on this list, and it compounds Bitcoin’s yield-sensitivity with additional ecosystem risk.

Technical Outlook

Solana is testing a critical zone. The current price of $63.70 sits just above the $62–$63 structural support; the 24-hour low of $63.50 shows the market has already probed this area. A sustained break below $62 would signal a re-test of the $55–$58 zone, where the 52-week low support begins. The short setup is to sell any bounce into the $65–$67 region with a stop at $70.00 (above the 24-hour high of $67.22), targeting $57.00. The long alternative — waiting for a clean hold and close above $65 with volume — would shift the bias to an accumulation. Bitcoin holding $60,000 is a prerequisite for any Solana rally; if BTC cracks $60K, Solana will likely test $55 before any institutional buyers step in.

Session Catalysts

Large on-chain transfers and rising tradable supply noted by Bybit analysts are creating short-term selling pressure independent of macro drivers. Watch the 30Y auction for the broader yield signal. Any announcement from Morgan Stanley on the pace of its Solana Trust launch, or additional corporate treasury announcements following Forward Industries’ model, would be idiosyncratic catalysts for a rebound. Thursday’s PPI is the next macro catalyst — a soft PPI that brings Treasury yields back down would provide the clearest relief opportunity for the entire crypto complex. The risk/reward for new longs improves materially below $62.


Section 3 · Deep Dives

Analyst Q&A — US Session 10 June 2026

Frequently asked questions on the macro and trade ideas behind today’s US session report. Click to expand.

CPI hit 4.2% exactly as forecast. Why is gold still selling off if the data matched expectations?
Because “as expected” is not “soft.” Gold’s reaction is being driven by the composition of the CPI and what it means for the rate path, not the headline number per se. The breakdown is unambiguous: energy is running at 23.5% year-over-year — the third consecutive acceleration month — and gasoline is up 40.5%. That is a structural, geopolitically-driven price shock with no near-term resolution as long as the Hormuz blockade holds. Core CPI at 2.9% (with the monthly print 0.2%, below the 0.3% forecast) gave a small offset, but it was not enough to change the narrative. The Fed’s problem is not that inflation is higher than expected; it is that inflation at 4.2% is nearly double its target with no convincing evidence of deceleration in the energy component. Goldman Sachs responded to the data by pushing its first rate cut to June 2027. That single shift — from a market that had been pricing some probability of cuts in late 2026 to one now pricing hikes — is the mechanism that drives gold lower. Every 25bp of additional tightening expectation raises the real yield on competing Treasury instruments, and a 30Y at 5.10% is a genuinely attractive alternative to a non-yielding metal. Gold will recover its footing structurally — central bank demand is record-high, and the Iran war is not ending imminently — but in the near term, the rate repricing dominates the haven bid.
USD/CAD is rising even though oil is elevated near $90–$93. Has the oil-loonie correlation broken down permanently?
Not permanently — but it is under unusual stress, and understanding why tells you which regime will eventually reassert itself. The oil-loonie correlation (higher oil → stronger CAD → lower USD/CAD) rests on the mechanism that Canadian energy export revenues boost corporate earnings, the current account, and thus CAD demand in FX markets. That mechanism still works; it is just being overwhelmed by three other forces right now. First, the Bank of Canada is at 2.75%, 75–100bp below the Fed’s 3.50–3.75%, and today’s 4.2% CPI widens the divergence further by increasing the probability of a US hike while the BoC faces stagflationary conditions at home. Rate differentials drive the “carry” flow in FX, and carry favours USD at the moment. Second, Canada is a downstream oil consumer as well as a producer: the Hormuz-driven energy price spike is simultaneously a revenue windfall for Canadian oil sands producers and an inflation tax on Canadian consumers, reducing household spending and complicating the BoC’s ability to raise rates in solidarity with the Fed. Third, the global risk-off from the Iran war re-escalation disproportionately reduces demand for cyclical currencies like CAD, regardless of commodity prices. The correlation will likely reassert itself if: (a) the Iran conflict de-escalates and oil prices fall, removing the inflationary pressure that justifies the BoC-Fed divergence, or (b) Canadian inflation accelerates to the point where the BoC is forced to match Fed hikes. Neither is imminent, which is why USD/CAD has a constructive bias in the near term.
Solana is down 52% year-over-year but has over $1 billion in ETF inflows and a major corporate treasury strategy. Why is the structural case not supporting the price?
Because price and fundamentals can diverge for extended periods, particularly in high-beta assets during macro regime transitions, and Solana is currently caught in exactly that trap. The structural case — ETF inflows from Bitwise and Fidelity, Morgan Stanley filing for a Solana Trust, Forward Industries holding 6.9 million SOL as a treasury asset — is genuine and represents a qualitatively different level of institutional engagement than existed during the 2021–2022 cycle. These are not speculative buyers; they are regulated entities making long-horizon allocations. But the macro headwind is equally real and currently dominant. At $63.70, Solana implies a 52% decline from its $295 peak — which occurred in the “zero real yield” environment of late 2024–early 2025. Today that environment is gone. A 30-year Treasury at 5.10% is a 5% risk-free annual return. Every institutional dollar that might otherwise enter Solana faces a quantified alternative. The regime that made speculative assets extraordinarily attractive — negative or near-zero real yields — has been fully reversed by the Iran energy shock and the Fed’s response to it. The structural buyers (ETF sponsors, corporate treasuries) are establishing long-term positions at these lower prices, which is why the $62 support is holding. But they are not in a rush, and macro sellers — quant funds reducing risk-on exposure in response to yield movements — can overwhelm them in the short term. The reconciliation: the $62 floor is real and institution-backed; the $295 high was speculative froth; fair value given the current rate environment is somewhere in between, probably $75–$100 on a 6–12 month horizon assuming yield stabilisation.
Why is the 30-year Treasury yield more important than the 10-year for today’s session?
Three reasons — duration, supply, and cross-asset transmission. On duration: the 30-year bond is the most sensitive instrument to long-run inflation and fiscal expectations. In an environment where inflation has just printed 4.2% and Goldman Sachs has removed rate cuts from the 2026 horizon, the long end re-prices most aggressively because it has to incorporate not just current policy but the entire path of expected future short rates and inflation. The 10-year is important, but it is more anchored by near-term Fed expectations; the 30-year is more exposed to fiscal trajectory and terminal inflation. On supply: the US Treasury will auction $22 billion of 30-year bonds at 13:00 ET today — the single largest bond auction of the week. Demand metrics at this auction (bid-to-cover, primary dealer share, tail) will directly signal how much premium the market requires to absorb long-duration US debt. A weak auction forces a repricing that echoes across equities, gold, crypto, and mortgages simultaneously. On cross-asset transmission: a 30Y yield above 5.10%–5.20% is historically the threshold that triggers de-leveraging in institutional portfolios with duration targets — pension funds, insurance companies, and sovereign wealth managers are forced to sell equities and buy bonds as yields rise, creating a negative feedback loop for risk assets. The 10Y-30Y spread (the “long-end curve steepening”) is also a leading indicator of whether the market believes the current rate cycle has a terminal endpoint or is becoming unmoored, which is the single most important structural question for the H2 2026 investment outlook.
Coca-Cola is flagged as a defensive hold in a session when most ideas are bearish or neutral. What makes it genuinely different from just “hiding out” in a defensive stock?
The distinction matters because “hiding out” in defensives often means accepting poor returns for reduced volatility — essentially paying an insurance premium without much upside. Coca-Cola in the current environment is different because the defensive premium is compounded by genuine fundamental momentum. The Q1 2026 earnings beat was not marginal: EPS of $0.86 vs. $0.81 consensus is a 6.2% beat, organic revenue growth of 10% YoY with 3% volume growth demonstrates that the company is both pricing above inflation and gaining market share — not just passing costs through. The 62% gross margin held despite commodity pressure, which means the pricing power is structural rather than cyclical. Against the current backdrop, there are three distinct reasons to own KO rather than just avoid it: first, the Iran escalation creates genuine consumer staples rotation — institutional risk managers explicitly reduce tech and add defensives in sustained geopolitical stress episodes, and KO is the most liquid defensive staple in the US. Second, rising inflation (today’s 4.2% CPI) is actually beneficial to KO’s revenue line — the company can price products higher, and its brands are sufficiently inelastic that volume does not fall commensurately. Third, with the average analyst target at $86.06 — 8%+ above current price — the risk-reward for a buy at $81.00 with a stop at $78.50 is structurally appealing in any scenario short of a full global recession. The risk is commodity input costs: if cocoa, aluminum, and corn syrup continue to escalate faster than KO can price, the 62% gross margin begins to erode. That is the thesis to monitor at the July 28 earnings call.
Natural gas is up 10.71% over the past month but still down 8% year-over-year. Is the uptrend sustainable or is this just a seasonal weather trade?
It is primarily a seasonal weather trade layered over a tightening structural balance — which makes it real but bounded. The seasonal component is unambiguous: above-normal temperature forecasts through June 24 will drive power-sector cooling demand, and that demand pull is the immediate catalyst for today’s +2.60% move. This pattern repeats every summer and is well-understood by the market. The structural component is more interesting: LNG export capacity has been growing steadily, Lower 48 supply has softened marginally to 108.8 bcfd from 109.7 bcfd, and the inventory surplus has narrowed from 10%+ above the five-year average to around 5% above — a directional improvement that is not yet tight but trending in the right direction. What makes the uptrend vulnerable: the 5% storage surplus is a real headwind that caps sharp rally attempts; LNG maintenance at Golden Pass and Freeport is a near-term export constraint that will reverse once facilities return, adding back the export demand that is currently absent; and the year-over-year decline of 8% tells you the market is still coming off a structurally oversupplied 2025. The uptrend is sustainable as a seasonal trade through mid-summer, with the $3.27 swing high and the $3.50 level as the targets. It becomes more structurally compelling if: (a) LNG maintenance ends earlier than expected, restoring export demand; (b) a heat wave above current forecasts materialises; or (c) the Iran conflict disrupts global LNG trade routes and shifts European demand to US suppliers. The $2.84 level (100% Fibonacci retracement) is the line that separates seasonal trade from trend-break — respect it as the stop.

US Session Summary — 10 June 2026

Wednesday’s US session opens with the most important macro number already confirmed. May CPI landed at 4.2% year-over-year — the highest since April 2023 — driven by gasoline up 40.5% and an energy index up 23.5%, both products of the Iran-Hormuz blockade that resumed overnight after Washington’s “self-defense” strikes and Tehran’s Fifth Fleet retaliation snapped the April ceasefire. Core CPI’s 0.2% monthly reading marginally undershot the 0.3% forecast — the only data ambiguity in an otherwise unambiguous hawk print. Goldman Sachs pushed its first Fed rate cut to June 2027. Markets price a 70% probability of a December 2026 hike. The US 30Y Treasury is approaching 5.10%. Gold has dropped to $4,168. Bitcoin is near $62,261. The session’s most important single event is the 30Y auction at 13:00 ET.

The actionable framework stratifies by conviction and risk profile. Most conviction long: Coca-Cola — earnings beat + defensive rotation + pricing power + 8% upside to consensus target. Yield trade: sell US 30Y bonds (short duration) — 4.2% CPI, Goldman 2027 rate-cut timeline, and today’s auction signal all push the long end higher; 5.25% is the tactical target. Energy long: Natural Gas on pullback to the $3.00–$3.06 Fibonacci zone — summer demand and a tightening storage balance, with the $3.27 swing high as the target.

In FX, USD/CAD is the cleaner dollar expression — BoC at 2.75% vs. Fed at 3.50%+ and soft Canadian data build the rate-differential bull case; buy dips toward 1.3900 for 1.4100. USD/CHF is more complex: the CHF safe-haven bid competes directly with dollar CPI strength — the bias is to sell USD/CHF rallies toward 0.8060 only while Iran hostilities remain active, with the 0.8140 stop respected strictly. Gold and Nasdaq are the two “structural sell” calls: sell gold rallies into $4,200 targeting $4,050, and sell Nasdaq rallies into 29,900–30,000 targeting 28,800 — both contingent on the 30Y yield remaining elevated above 5.00%. In crypto, Bitcoin is range-neutral ($60K–$65K) and accumulate only on a clean test of the $60,000 structural floor; Solana near $63.70 is a tactical short into the $65–$67 zone targeting $57, with the institutional $62 floor the level that changes the whole setup. The single most important instruction for the session: watch the 30Y auction result at 13:00 ET — it sets the yield ceiling for the week and will determine whether the rate repricing accelerates or pauses into the June 17 FOMC.

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Capital Street FX · US Session Daily Technical Analysis · Wednesday, 10 June 2026

This report is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Trading CFDs involves significant risk of loss. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Risk Disclosure · Privacy Policy

© 2026 Capital Street FX. All market data sourced from live feeds as of the US session open, 10 June 2026. Levels shown are schematic representations for illustration, not exchange screenshots. Key sources: BLS.gov (official CPI release), TradingEconomics, Investing.com, CBS News, Yahoo Finance, CoinDesk, Bybit, CoinGecko, FXDailyReport, Reuters, Bloomberg, CNBC, Goldman Sachs Research, Saxo Bank, FRED (St. Louis Fed), Barchart, CSFX Research Desk.