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Iran Peace Deal “Largely Negotiated” Sends Oil Crashing & Risk Soaring as BoJ Hike Week Begins | Technical Analysis -Asian Session | 12 June 2026

June 12, 2026
CSFXadmin
Iran Peace Deal “Largely Negotiated” Sends Oil Crashing & Risk Soaring as BoJ Hike Week Begins | Capital Street FX Asian Session Brief · 12 June 2026
Friday, 12 June 2026  ·  Asian Session Daily Technical Analysis 🇯🇵 LIVE · RISK-ON

Iran Peace Deal “Largely Negotiated” Sends
Oil Crashing as BoJ Hike Week Dawns

USD/JPY 160.29 ▲ · AUD/USD 0.7031 ▼ · Hang Seng ~24,702.6 ▲ · Copper ~$6.40 ▲ · WTI Crude ~$86.30 ▼ · Dogecoin ~$0.0860 ▲ · Litecoin ~$42.00 ▲ · Bitcoin ~$63,427.90 ▲ · Gold ~$4,205 ▲
Analyst: Capital Street FX Research Desk · Session: Tokyo / Sydney / Hong Kong, 12 June 2026 · LIVE · BREAKING: Trump says US-Iran peace deal reopening the Strait of Hormuz is “largely negotiated” · WTI crashes ~4% to a 4-week low near $86.30 · Asian equities and crypto rally · BoJ decision 15–16 Jun, RBA hold 16 Jun, FOMC 17 Jun, BoE 18 Jun · BoJ Policy Rate: 0.75% (hike to 1.00% near-certain 16 Jun) · RBA: 4.35% · Fed: 3.50–3.75% · DXY ~99.8 · Strait of Hormuz reopening pending sign-off
Session Overview · Live

Asia wakes up to the sharpest sentiment reversal of the month. Late Thursday, President Trump posted that a peace agreement with Iran — one that would reopen the Strait of Hormuz and end the three-month conflict — is “largely negotiated” and will be announced shortly, with a memorandum of understanding awaiting final sign-off from both Washington and Tehran. The market reaction was immediate and violent: crude oil cratered roughly 4% to its lowest level since mid-May near $86.30, ripping the geopolitical war premium out of the energy complex overnight and triggering a broad risk-on rotation into equities, industrial metals and crypto just as the region heads into the year’s most consequential central-bank week.

The reaction across the region is a clean, one-directional risk rally — almost the mirror image of the past month’s war-driven defensiveness. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng is firmer near 24,702.6, building on Thursday’s gains as oil-import-sensitive Asian equities cheer the prospect of a durable de-escalation, while Japan’s Nikkei extends its advance with exporters tracking a still-weak yen. USD/JPY is pinned at 160.29, effectively glued to the intervention line even as the broader risk tape turns constructive — the Iran de-escalation removes one inflationary leg (energy) just days before a Bank of Japan that was already leaning hawkish on a separate leg (wholesale prices). Copper has rebounded sharply off three-week lows toward $6.40/lb as the growth-friendly headline outweighs the loss of its modest oil-linked cost-push support, while gold holds a haven bid near $4,205 even as risk assets rally — a sign the de-escalation is being read as “real but not yet done.”

The crypto tape is the cleanest, fastest expression of the relief. Bitcoin has reclaimed ground toward $63,427.90, up over 2% as the Iran-driven risk-off unwind that had pushed it below $60,000 earlier in the week eases, dragging the broader altcoin complex higher with it. Dogecoin is firmer near $0.0860 on the back of accelerating ETF inflows ahead of today’s SpaceX IPO-linked catalysts, while Litecoin has stabilised near $42.00 after testing multi-month lows, still deeply oversold on the daily chart. The binary that now overhangs the entire week is twofold: whether Tehran and Washington actually sign the memorandum in the coming hours or days — and whether the Bank of Japan, no longer facing an acute oil-driven inflation shock, tempers its hawkish lean on 16 June. Open a live account to trade the Asian session.

USD/JPY
160.29
▲ at intervention line
AUD/USD
0.7031
▼ oversold, near 70c
Hang Seng
~24,702.6
▲ risk-on, +1%
Copper (HG)
~$6.40
▲ off 3-wk low
WTI Crude
~$86.30
▼ -4%, 4-wk low
Dogecoin (DOGE)
~$0.0860
▲ ETF inflows up
Litecoin (LTC)
~$42.00
▲ off lows
Bitcoin (BTC)
~$63,427.90
▲ reclaims $63.4k

Section 0 · Breaking News

Asian Session Headlines — 12 June 2026

Live market-moving events as a sudden US-Iran peace breakthrough collides with next week’s BoJ-RBA-Fed-BoE central-bank cluster at the Tokyo, Sydney and Hong Kong open

🟢 Critical · Geopolitics — BREAKING
Trump: US-Iran Peace Deal Reopening Hormuz “Largely Negotiated” — Oil Crashes 4% to a Four-Week Low
In a late-Thursday social media post, President Trump said an agreement with Iran — including the complete reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, the chokepoint for roughly a fifth of global oil flows — has been “largely negotiated” between the US, Iran and other countries, with a memorandum of understanding as a first phase ahead of broader 30–60 day talks. The announcement triggered an immediate unwind of the war-risk premium: WTI crude tumbled to its lowest level since mid-May near $86.30, sending a wave of relief through Asian risk assets. The caveat is real: both sides have left “wiggle room,” with formal sign-off from Washington and Tehran still pending, and previous ceasefire announcements this year have been followed by skirmishes.
IRAN · HORMUZ · OIL · RISK-ON
🟠 Critical · BoJ / Rates — NEXT WEEK
BoJ Still Seen Hiking to 1.00% on 16 June, But Iran De-Escalation Could Soften Ueda’s Tone
The Bank of Japan remains widely expected to lift its policy rate by 25bp to 1.00% at its 15–16 June meeting — the first time at that level since 1995 — with the case built on a three-year-high 6.3% wholesale inflation print and an increasingly hawkish Governor Ueda. Overnight’s Iran breakthrough complicates the picture only at the margin: a chunk of Japan’s import-cost inflation has been energy-driven, so a durable Hormuz reopening would, over time, ease some of that pressure. Markets still price an 80–97% probability of the hike itself, but Ueda’s forward guidance — whether he frames it as “hike-and-hold” or signals a faster path — is now the swing factor for the yen-carry unwind that historically follows BoJ moves.
BoJ · UEDA · HIKE · CARRY UNWIND
🔵 High Impact · Asia Equities / Commodities
Hang Seng Extends Gains Near 24,702.6 as Oil-Import Relief Lifts Risk Appetite; Copper Snaps Back Toward $6.40
Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index is building on Thursday’s advance, trading firmer near 24,702.6 as the prospect of a durable Iran de-escalation directly benefits energy-importing economies across the region — lower oil costs flow straight through to corporate margins and consumer purchasing power in Hong Kong, China, Japan and Korea. Copper has bounced sharply off three-week lows to around $6.40/lb, recovering as the growth-positive headline outweighs the loss of oil’s modest cost-push support; Jefferies continues to flag a structural copper supply deficit near 491kt/yr through 2030 on a delayed Grasberg recovery, underpinning the metal’s longer-term floor even as today’s move is largely a risk-sentiment bounce.
HANG SENG · COPPER · CHINA · RISK-ON
🟠 Medium Impact · Crypto
Bitcoin Reclaims $63,427.90 as Iran Relief Eases Carry-Unwind Fears; Dogecoin Firms on ETF Inflows, Litecoin Stabilises Near $42.00
Digital assets are catching a relief bid alongside broader risk assets, with Bitcoin climbing back toward $63,427.90 after dipping below $60,000 earlier in the week for the first time since 2024. Dogecoin is firmer near $0.0860, supported by a 29% jump in US spot Dogecoin ETF net inflows to $12.44m ahead of today’s SpaceX-linked catalysts, with whale accumulation reported above the $0.081 structural support where over 30bn DOGE last changed hands. Litecoin is stabilising near $42.00 after a confirmed bear-flag breakdown earlier in the week dragged it toward multi-month lows; the SEC’s March 2026 classification of LTC as a commodity and a newly approved Canary Capital ETF have so far failed to halt the slide, leaving the token deeply oversold but still searching for a base. The Crypto Fear & Greed Index remains in “Extreme Fear,” and the looming BoJ decision — historically a trigger for sharp carry-unwind corrections — caps how far any bounce can run.
BITCOIN · DOGECOIN · LITECOIN · ETF

Section 1 · Economic Calendar

Asian Session Data — 12–18 June 2026

Key releases and event risks through next week’s critical BoJ – RBA – Fed – BoE central-bank cluster (times in GMT)

Time (GMT) Region Event Forecast Previous Impact
Thu 11 Jun 🇺🇸US PPI May / Initial Jobless Claims — released — / 225K — / 219K MEDIUM
Thu 11 Jun (late) 🇺🇸US / Iran Trump: US-Iran Peace Deal “Largely Negotiated” — BREAKING Ceasefire fragile CRITICAL
Fri 12 Jun 01:30 🇺🇸US SpaceX IPO-Linked Crypto Catalysts MEDIUM
Mon 15 Jun 02:00 🇨🇳China Retail Sales / Industrial Production (May) MEDIUM
Tue 16 Jun 04:30 🇦🇺Australia RBA Cash Rate Decision 4.35% (Hold) 4.35% HIGH
Tue 16 Jun ~03:00 🇯🇵Japan BoJ Policy Rate Decision + Ueda Presser 1.00% (+25bp) 0.75% CRITICAL
Wed 17 Jun 18:00 🇺🇸US FOMC Rate Decision 3.50–3.75% (Hold) 3.50–3.75% CRITICAL
Thu 18 Jun 11:00 🇬🇧UK BoE Bank Rate Decision 3.75% (Hold) 3.75% HIGH
Ongoing 🇮🇷Iran US-Iran MOU Formal Sign-Off & Hormuz Reopening Pending Largely negotiated CRITICAL

Section 2 · Trade Ideas

Asian Session Setups — 12 June 2026

Seven instruments; fundamental backdrop, technical levels, and directional bias for the Asian session and week ahead

USD/JPY
Spot · Pinned at the Intervention Line as Iran Relief Meets a Hawkish BoJ Setup
160.29
▲ at the intervention line
Today’s Range
159.91–160.31
BoJ Policy Rate
0.75% → 1.00%
Fed Funds Rate
3.50–3.75%
52-Week Range
142.68–160.74
Intervention Risk
ELEVATED
Direction Bias
NEUTRAL-BEARISH
USD/JPY · Daily Chart · CSFX Research · 12 Jun 2026
USD/JPY · Daily Chart · CSFX Research · 12 Jun 2026
▼ NEUTRAL-TO-BEARISH USD/JPY — Sell Rallies Into the BoJ Hike & Intervention Risk
Entry (Short)160.80
Stop Loss162.50
Take Profit157.00

Fundamental Backdrop

USD/JPY at 160.29 sits squarely on the line markets treat as a Japanese FX intervention trigger, and overnight’s Iran breakthrough has not dislodged it. The pair’s 52-week range now tops out at 160.74, meaning the dollar is trading at the very edge of where it has been allowed to go all year. The rate differential still favours the dollar — a Fed at 3.50–3.75% versus a BoJ at 0.75% — but that gap is set to narrow mechanically next week with an 80–97% probability of a 25bp BoJ hike to 1.00%, the first time at that level since 1995. The twist from the Iran news is that one pillar of Japan’s inflation case — imported energy costs — may now ease if the Hormuz reopening holds, which could give Governor Ueda room for a softer “hike-and-hold” framing rather than a hawkish signal of further tightening. That would, paradoxically, remove some of the yen-bullish case even as the hike itself goes ahead.

Technical Outlook

Technical indicators currently rate USD/JPY a “Strong Buy” on the daily chart, with the pair consolidating in a tight 159.91–160.31 range right at the top of its 52-week band. The 160.74 high is the immediate ceiling; a clean break above 162.50 (the stop) would signal the dollar uptrend and carry trade are overpowering both the BoJ story and intervention risk, opening fresh multi-decade highs. On the downside, a daily close back below 159.00 opens the path toward 157.00 (the target) and then 155.50. With price action this compressed against a hard ceiling, the asymmetry still favours fading strength into 160.8–162 rather than chasing a breakout that would require Japan’s authorities to stand aside at the exact level they have defended all year.

Session Catalysts

Watch for: (1) any verbal warning or actual intervention from Japan’s MOF/BoJ as the pair grinds against 160–161; (2) follow-through on the Iran MOU — formal sign-off would cement the risk-on tone but also remove a BoJ inflation argument, a double-edged outcome for the yen; (3) next week’s BoJ decision and, critically, Ueda’s tone — a hawkish hike accelerates yen strength, while a “hike-and-hold” framed around easing energy costs could disappoint yen bulls; (4) US data into the FOMC. Size for two-sided headline risk at a multi-decade ceiling; this remains a sell-rallies trade rather than a breakout chase.

AUD/USD
Spot · Oversold Near 0.70 — Iran Relief and a Firmer Copper Tape vs. a Sticky Risk-Off Dollar
0.7031
▼ -0.09%, near 2-month lows
5-Day Forecast
~0.6925–0.6985
RBA Cash Rate
4.35% (Hold)
Fed Funds Rate
3.50–3.75%
14-Day RSI
~43–46 (oversold zone)
Copper / Iran Tailwind
Improving
Direction Bias
NEUTRAL-BULLISH
AUD/USD · Daily Chart · CSFX Research · 12 Jun 2026
AUD/USD · Daily Chart · CSFX Research · 12 Jun 2026
▲ NEUTRAL-TO-BULLISH AUD/USD — Cautious Dip-Buy on Oversold Conditions + Risk-On Tailwind
Entry (Long)0.6985
Stop Loss0.6900
Take Profit0.7150

Fundamental Backdrop

AUD/USD at 0.7031 remains in a soft downtrend that has taken the pair from a 50-day average near 0.7044–0.7056 down toward the 0.69 handle, with most forecast models still pointing lower over a one-month horizon (5-day projections cluster near 0.6925, one-month near 0.6770–0.6925). What changes this morning is the catalyst mix: the Iran peace headline is unambiguously positive for a high-beta, commodity-linked currency like the Aussie — lower oil costs support global growth and risk appetite, and copper’s snap-back toward $6.40 directly feeds the resource-trade narrative that underpins AUD. Against that, the RBA’s hold at 4.35% on 16 June (with hawkish guidance pointing toward 4.70% by end-2026 and no cuts until 2028, according to recent commentary) provides a real carry buffer versus a Fed that markets increasingly see as done hiking. The tension is between a structurally bearish technical trend and a sudden, sharp improvement in the risk backdrop.

Technical Outlook

The pair sits just above its 200-day average (~0.6740) and below its 50-day average (~0.7044–0.7056), with a 14-day RSI near 43–46 — soft but not yet at extreme oversold. The 0.6980–0.7000 zone (round number, entry area) is the immediate support shelf; a clean break below 0.6900 (the stop) would confirm the bearish forecast trajectory and open 0.6820 and the 0.6770 area flagged by one-month models. On the upside, 0.7080 is the first hurdle, with 0.7150 (the target) and 0.7200 as the next resistance band. Given the conflicting signals — a bearish trend structure but a sharply improved fundamental catalyst overnight — this is framed as a tactical, smaller-size dip-buy rather than a trend call, with a tight invalidation on a daily close below 0.6900.

Session Catalysts

Watch for: (1) follow-through on the Iran MOU — confirmation would extend the risk-on bid for AUD and copper together; (2) copper’s continuation toward $6.40–$6.60 as the cleanest read on Chinese/global demand sentiment; (3) China’s 15 June activity data — firm retail sales/IP would reinforce the resource-currency bid; (4) the RBA’s tone on 16 June and any signal on the 4.70% terminal-rate path. Keep size modest into the BoJ/Fed/BoE cluster, which can override AUD’s own improving story with a broad-dollar liquidity event.

Copper (HG)
COMEX · ~$6.40/lb — Snapping Back Off Three-Week Lows as Iran Relief Lifts Growth Outlook
$6.40
▲ recovering off 3-wk low
2026 Record (2 Jun)
~$6.60/lb
Recent Low (Thu)
<$6.20/lb
Supply Deficit (Jefferies)
~491kt/yr to 2030
Grasberg Recovery
Delayed
Iran/Risk Tailwind
Strong, Fresh
Direction Bias
BULLISH
Copper (HG) · Daily Chart · CSFX Research · 12 Jun 2026
Copper (HG) · Daily Chart · CSFX Research · 12 Jun 2026
▲ BULLISH COPPER — Buy Dips on the Supply Deficit Now Reinforced by a Risk-On Catalyst
Entry (Long)$6.25
Stop Loss$6.05
Take Profit$6.60

Fundamental Backdrop

Copper has reclaimed roughly $6.40/lb after touching three-week lows below $6.20 on Thursday, when heightened Middle East uncertainty and rate-hike fears weighed on the industrial-metals complex. Overnight’s Iran peace headline flips that narrative directly: a durable de-escalation lowers the discount-rate risk that comes with a hawkish BoJ/Fed cluster and reinforces the global growth outlook that copper demand ultimately depends on. Underneath the day-to-day noise, the structural story is unchanged and remains the dominant medium-term driver — Jefferies continues to project an average annual supply deficit near 491,000 tonnes through 2030, citing a slower-than-expected recovery at the Grasberg mine, while China’s record May exports (+19.4% YoY to $376.8bn) underline resilient demand for copper-intensive goods. The combination of a structural deficit and a fresh risk-on catalyst gives the metal a hard floor and a renewed reason to test its 2026 record near $6.60.

Technical Outlook

The bounce off sub-$6.20 puts copper back inside its recent range, with $6.60 (the 2 June record and the target) as the key upside level to watch on any continuation of the Iran-relief rally. The $6.25 entry zone represents the lower part of Thursday’s pullback — a logical area to add to longs on any retest, with $6.05 (the stop) sitting below the recent three-week low and serving as the level that would invalidate the supply-deficit floor thesis for now. A daily close above $6.60 would open a fresh push into uncharted territory above the 2026 record, consistent with the deficit narrative reasserting itself once the risk-sentiment bounce is digested.

Session Catalysts

Watch for: (1) confirmation of the Iran MOU — a signed deal would extend the growth-positive tailwind, while any breakdown in talks would reintroduce the risk-off pressure that drove Thursday’s sell-off; (2) LME warehouse stock trends — the multi-session drawdown that preceded this week’s dip remains the cleanest structural signal; (3) China’s 15 June activity data; (4) the BoJ/Fed/RBA/BoE cluster — a broadly hawkish week could cap the bounce via a stronger dollar and higher discount rates even as the growth story improves. The structural deficit argues for buying dips; today’s catalyst argues the dip may already be shallow.

Crude Oil (WTI)
NYMEX · ~$86.30 — War Premium Unwinds on a “Largely Negotiated” Iran Peace Deal
$86.30
▼ -4%, lowest since April/May
4-Week Performance
-15.7%
12-Month Performance
+26.5%
Hormuz Status
Reopening Pending
Iran MOU
“Largely Negotiated”
China Saudi Imports
Expected Lower (Jul)
Direction Bias
BEARISH
WTI Crude Oil · Daily Chart · CSFX Research · 12 Jun 2026
WTI Crude Oil · Daily Chart · CSFX Research · 12 Jun 2026
▼ BEARISH CRUDE OIL — Sell Rallies as the War Premium Unwinds Toward Pre-Conflict Levels
Entry (Short)$89.00
Stop Loss$93.50
Take Profit$80.00

Fundamental Backdrop

WTI crude has fallen more than 4% toward $86.30, its lowest level since mid-April/May, after Trump suspended planned Iranian strikes and said a peace agreement — including a complete Hormuz reopening — is “largely negotiated” and could be signed as early as this weekend. The collapse mirrors the pattern from April’s earlier ceasefire announcement, when Brent dropped roughly 16% in a single session on similar news. Crucially, oil facilities have largely been spared throughout the conflict, which has prevented the kind of acute supply shock many traders feared and kept prices below earlier conflict peaks even before today’s news. On the demand side, the picture is also softening: Chinese imports from Saudi Arabia are expected to fall in July even as tanker traffic through Hormuz has already been increasing. With the war premium that pushed Brent toward $96–110 and WTI above $106 earlier in the conflict now unwinding fast, crude is repricing back toward levels last seen before the escalation.

Technical Outlook

The break to a four-week low near $86.30 is a decisive technical shift after WTI had been consolidating in the $90–106 range through the conflict. $89.00 (the entry) represents a retracement zone just above the breakdown level — a logical area to position for continuation if the rally fades on any rebound attempt. $93.50 (the stop) sits above the recent consolidation floor and would signal the de-escalation narrative is being questioned, potentially on news that the MOU sign-off has stalled. To the downside, $80.00 (the target) aligns with the broader pre-conflict range that prevailed before the February escalation, and a sustained move below $86.30 with confirmation of the peace deal would open that path quickly.

Session Catalysts

Watch for: (1) formal sign-off on the US-Iran MOU from both Washington and Tehran — confirmation accelerates the move toward $80, while any reversal or fresh skirmish (as has happened multiple times this year) could spark a sharp short-covering bounce; (2) actual shipping data through Hormuz — a genuine increase in tanker traffic is the real-world confirmation traders will look for beyond headlines; (3) the BoJ/Fed/RBA/BoE cluster — lower oil eases one inflation input for all four central banks, a dynamic that itself feeds back into the dollar and risk tone; (4) any OPEC+ response to a sustained price slide below $85. This is a fast-moving, headline-driven short with outsized two-way risk — size accordingly.

Hang Seng Index
HKEX · ~24,702.6 — Oil-Import Relief and a Risk-On Tape Lift Hong Kong Equities
~24,702.6
▲ +1.04%
Previous Close
24,249
52-Week Range
23,186–28,056
Iran Relief Impact
Direct Tailwind
China Data (15 Jun)
Pending
Regional Risk Tape
Risk-On
Direction Bias
BULLISH (TACTICAL)
Hang Seng Index · Daily Chart · CSFX Research · 12 Jun 2026
Hang Seng Index · Daily Chart · CSFX Research · 12 Jun 2026
▲ BULLISH HANG SENG — Tactical Long on Oil-Relief Rally, Watch the BoJ/Fed Cluster
Entry (Long)24,250
Stop Loss23,700
Take Profit25,800

Fundamental Backdrop

The Hang Seng is trading firmer near 24,702.6, up about 1% and building on Thursday’s gains, with the index sitting well within its 52-week range of 23,186–28,056. The overnight Iran peace headline is a near-direct fundamental tailwind for Hong Kong and the broader Chinese equity complex: Hong Kong and mainland China are significant net energy importers, so a sustained drop in crude from the $96–110 conflict-era range toward $86.30 and potentially lower translates into lower input costs across shipping, manufacturing, utilities and consumer sectors — precisely the kind of margin tailwind that flows through to index-level earnings expectations. The index also benefits from the broader risk-on rotation; capital that had been parked defensively (in gold, USDT, or simply cash) amid the war-risk backdrop has a fresh reason to rotate back into regional equities. The risk to this picture is that next week’s BoJ-RBA-Fed-BoE cluster could reassert a tightening-driven headwind that overwhelms the oil-relief story, particularly if the BoJ delivers a hawkish hike that strengthens the yen and pressures regional risk appetite broadly.

Technical Outlook

At ~24,702.6, the index trades comfortably above its previous close of 24,249 and in the lower-middle portion of its 52-week range, leaving ample room to the 28,056 high before any structural resistance becomes relevant. The 24,250 entry zone corresponds to Thursday’s close — a pullback to this level on any short-term profit-taking would offer a reasonable continuation entry into the relief rally. 23,700 (the stop) sits below the recent consolidation area and would signal the oil-relief bounce has failed to hold. On the upside, 25,800 (the target) represents a meaningful extension of the current move and a level that would confirm the risk-on rotation has real follow-through rather than being a single-session headline reaction.

Session Catalysts

Watch for: (1) confirmation or breakdown of the Iran MOU — the single biggest swing factor for the next 24–48 hours; (2) China’s 15 June retail sales and industrial production data — a beat would compound the risk-on tone, a miss would partially offset it; (3) the path of crude — continued declines toward $80 reinforce the import-cost relief thesis; (4) the BoJ on 16 June — a hawkish surprise that strengthens the yen and tightens regional liquidity is the main risk to this tactical long. Treat this as a sentiment-driven trade with a defined window before the central-bank cluster reasserts itself.

Dogecoin (DOGE)
Spot · ~$0.0860 — Rising ETF Inflows and Whale Accumulation Into a SpaceX-Linked Catalyst Day
$0.0860
▲ +4% on the day
Market Cap
~$14.7bn (#9–11)
Key Support
$0.081 (UTXO cluster)
ETF Inflows
+29% to $12.44m
Whale Accumulation
+200m DOGE (1wk)
Fear & Greed
Extreme Fear
Direction Bias
NEUTRAL-BULLISH
DOGE/USDT · Daily Chart · CSFX Research · 12 Jun 2026
DOGE/USDT · Daily Chart · CSFX Research · 12 Jun 2026
▲ NEUTRAL-TO-BULLISH DOGECOIN — Small-Size Dip-Accumulation on Support, Hostage to BTC and the BoJ
Entry (Long)$0.0820
Stop Loss$0.0750
Take Profit$0.1000

Fundamental Backdrop

Dogecoin trades near $0.0860, up roughly 4% on the day and benefiting from the broader crypto relief rally that has pulled Bitcoin back toward $63,427.90. The token’s own fundamentals have a constructive near-term skew: US spot Dogecoin ETF net inflows rose 29% to $12.44m heading into 12 June, a date tied to SpaceX IPO-linked catalysts that have drawn fresh retail attention to the meme-coin complex. On-chain data shows whale wallets have accumulated more than 200 million DOGE over the past week near the $0.081 level, where UTXO analysis shows over 30 billion DOGE were last transacted — a structurally significant support cluster. Despite this, the token remains down roughly 9% on the week and about 25% over the past month, and DOGE sits at the extreme speculative end of crypto: it is typically first to sell off in risk-off conditions and last to recover absent a specific narrative, making it highly dependent on Bitcoin holding its current bounce and on the BoJ not draining global liquidity next week.

Technical Outlook

The daily chart shows DOGE deeply oversold (recent RSI readings near 20, MACD negative, ADX above 56), having entered what technical analysts describe as a “4-year HL buy zone” below its 200-day moving average after a 20-day selloff. The $0.081 level is the key structural support — both from on-chain UTXO data and the 50-day EMA — making the $0.0820 entry a logical accumulation zone just above it. A break below $0.0750 (the stop) would violate that structural floor and open a retest of the 2026 lows. On the upside, a recovery above the 20-day EMA near $0.10 has been flagged by technical commentary as opening a path toward $0.12–$0.14–$0.16, making $0.10 (the target) a reasonable first objective for a bounce, with the broader bullish case requiring DOGE to hold its rising 200-day average.

Session Catalysts

Watch for: (1) Bitcoin’s ability to hold above $60,000–$63,427 — DOGE’s correlation to BTC dominates all coin-specific news; (2) follow-through on today’s SpaceX-linked catalysts and any continuation of the ETF inflow trend; (3) whale wallet behaviour around the $0.081 support — continued accumulation would reinforce the floor; (4) the BoJ decision on 16 June, which has historically preceded 23–30% Bitcoin drawdowns via carry-unwind and would likely hit DOGE disproportionately given its risk-curve position. This is explicitly a small-size, high-volatility dip-accumulation trade, not a core position.

Litecoin (LTC)
Spot · ~$42.00 — Deeply Oversold After a Bear-Flag Breakdown, Stabilising on the Broad Crypto Bounce
$42.00
▲ +0.84% (24h)
Market Cap
~$3.3bn (#29)
All-Time High
$420 (Dec 2017)
7-Day Performance
~-8%
SEC Status
Classified as Commodity
ETF
Canary Capital LTC ETF Live
Direction Bias
NEUTRAL — OVERSOLD BOUNCE
LTC/USD · Daily Chart · CSFX Research · 12 Jun 2026
LTC/USD · Daily Chart · CSFX Research · 12 Jun 2026
▲ NEUTRAL-TO-BULLISH LITECOIN — Tactical Bounce Off Multi-Month Lows, Confirmation Needed
Entry (Long)$40.00
Stop Loss$36.50
Take Profit$50.00

Fundamental Backdrop

Litecoin trades near $42.00, up modestly on the day as part of the broad crypto relief bounce tied to the Iran peace headline and Bitcoin’s reclaim of $63,427.90. The token remains down roughly 90% from its December 2017 all-time high of $420 and about 8% over the past week, having confirmed a bear-flag breakdown earlier this week that left sellers firmly in control. On the structural side, the picture is more constructive than the price action suggests: the SEC classified LTC as a commodity in March 2026, removing a key regulatory overhang, and Canary Capital’s newly approved Litecoin ETF is live — though neither development has yet translated into sustained price support, with capital continuing to rotate toward newer, higher-momentum tokens. LTC’s exceptionally decentralised ownership structure (top holders control under 1% of supply) provides a structural floor against any single actor dominating price action, and recent commentary has flagged Litecoin among established altcoins that could see outsized gains if a broader altcoin-season rotation materialises.

Technical Outlook

LTC is testing support after breaking below the $46–47 range earlier in the week; the 14-day RSI is in oversold territory but, per recent technical commentary, without clear reversal signals yet — meaning today’s bounce should be treated as tentative rather than confirmed. The $40.00 entry sits at the psychologically important round-number level flagged as the near-term risk-defense zone; a clean break and daily close below $36.50 (the stop) would signal the bear-flag breakdown is continuing toward the next support shelf in the mid-$30s. On the upside, a recovery back through $46–47 would repair the bear-flag damage and open a path toward $50.00 (the target) and the $52–56 area that several 2026 forecasts cite as a near-term ceiling for a Q2 recovery scenario.

Session Catalysts

Watch for: (1) Bitcoin’s follow-through above $63,427–63,000 — LTC’s correlation to the broader market dominates idiosyncratic news; (2) any flow data from the Canary Capital LTC ETF — the first sign of sustained inflows would be a meaningful signal given the SEC’s commodity classification removed a regulatory hurdle months ago without yet driving price; (3) the $40 round-number defense — holding here on any pullback would be the first technical sign that oversold conditions are translating into a base; (4) the BoJ/Fed/RBA/BoE cluster next week, which carries the same carry-unwind risk for LTC as for the rest of the high-beta crypto complex. This is a tactical, defined-risk bounce trade against a structurally damaged chart — confirmation above $46 would materially upgrade the setup.


Section 3 · Deep Analysis

Key Questions for the Asian Session

Detailed answers to the session’s most important analytical questions

Crude oil just crashed 4% on a peace deal that isn’t even signed yet. Why does the market move so violently on something still described as “largely negotiated”?
Because oil’s recent price level was not really about current supply and demand — it was a war-risk premium, and premiums are priced on probability, not certainty. Throughout the Iran conflict, oil facilities themselves were largely spared and tanker traffic through Hormuz, while reduced, never fully stopped; the elevated price reflected the market’s assessment of how likely a much worse outcome (an actual closure of the strait, strikes on production infrastructure) was at any given moment. When Trump says a deal reopening Hormuz is “largely negotiated,” the market doesn’t need to wait for ink on paper to reprice — it immediately recalculates the probability of that worse outcome sharply lower, and the premium evaporates accordingly. This is exactly the pattern seen in April, when an earlier ceasefire announcement triggered a roughly 16% single-session drop in Brent. The risk, of course, is that “largely negotiated” has previously been followed by stalled talks and renewed skirmishes, so today’s move prices in a probability shift, not a certainty — which is precisely why the trade idea above frames this as a sell-rallies setup with a defined stop rather than an all-in bet that the deal closes cleanly.
If oil just crashed, why is gold still holding firm near $4,200 instead of selling off with the rest of the “fear” trade?
Because gold’s bid isn’t only about the Iran war — it’s also a hedge against the inflation and rate uncertainty that the upcoming BoJ-RBA-Fed-BoE cluster represents, and that uncertainty hasn’t gone away just because one geopolitical risk has eased. Gold had been supported by both the war premium in energy (which feeds into broad inflation expectations) and by haven demand amid a fragile risk backdrop. The Iran news removes the first leg, but the second leg — four major central banks delivering decisions within four days, with the BoJ hike being the first 1% Japanese policy rate since 1995 — is still squarely ahead. Additionally, gold often lags risk-asset reversals by a session or two simply because positioning takes time to unwind; a sharp overnight oil move doesn’t necessarily trigger an immediate, equally sharp move in gold positioning that built up over weeks. The honest read is that gold holding near $4,200 while oil craters is the market saying “one risk is fading, but the central-bank risk is not” — a nuanced, two-handed reaction rather than a contradiction.
USD/JPY is sitting at 160.24, right at its 52-week high, and the technical signal says “Strong Buy” — yet the trade idea here is to sell it. What’s going on?
This is a case where the technical signal and the structural risk are both true at the same time, and the trade idea is built around the asymmetry between them, not a denial of the trend. “Strong Buy” reflects genuine momentum: the dollar is firm on a still-wide rate gap (Fed at 3.50–3.75% vs. BoJ at 0.75%), and that momentum is real. But 160.24 is not just any price — it is at the very top of the pair’s entire 52-week range (142.68–160.74), a level Japanese authorities have repeatedly signalled they consider intervention territory. A “Strong Buy” signal at the ceiling of a year-long range, right before a central bank meeting that could narrow the rate gap from the other side, carries a very different risk profile than the same signal in the middle of a range with no major catalysts ahead. The trade idea isn’t betting against the trend outright — it’s recognising that the reward-to-risk of chasing momentum into a hard ceiling, with intervention and a hawkish BoJ both live possibilities within days, is poor compared to waiting for a pullback or fading an overextension. If the dollar genuinely breaks 162.50, the short is stopped out and the trend thesis wins — the position sizing reflects that this is a contrarian bet on a specific catalyst, not a denial of price action.
Dogecoin and Litecoin are both “meme-adjacent” altcoins trading near multi-month lows, but one trade idea is framed around ETF inflows and whale buying, while the other is framed as a pure technical bounce. Why the different emphasis?
Because the two tokens currently have different catalyst structures, even though both sit in the same high-beta, oversold corner of the crypto market. Dogecoin has an active, dated catalyst calendar right now: ETF inflows just rose 29% heading into a SpaceX-IPO-linked event today, and on-chain data shows whale wallets actively accumulating at the $0.081 support over the past week. That’s a live, ongoing accumulation story with specific data points to track. Litecoin’s structural improvements — the SEC’s commodity classification and the Canary Capital ETF — are both already in the past (March 2026 and earlier this year respectively) and have demonstrably not yet produced a price response; the token kept falling afterward. So for LTC, those facts are background context explaining why the floor might eventually hold, but they aren’t an active catalyst the way DOGE’s ETF-inflow acceleration is. That’s why the Dogecoin idea leans on “why now” (active accumulation, dated catalyst) while the Litecoin idea leans on “is this the bottom” (oversold technicals, awaiting confirmation). Both ultimately depend on the same macro variable — Bitcoin holding its bounce and the BoJ not draining liquidity — but the near-term trigger for each is different.
The Hang Seng trade idea calls the rally “tactical” with a defined window before the BoJ cluster reasserts itself. How should a trader actually interpret that kind of time-limited bias?
It’s an instruction to separate the catalyst’s strength from its durability, and to size and manage the position accordingly. The Iran peace headline is a strong catalyst — it directly improves the earnings outlook for oil-importing economies like Hong Kong and China, and the initial price reaction (the Hang Seng’s move to ~24,500) reflects that. But “strong” and “durable” are different things: the catalyst’s strength is high right now because it’s fresh and surprising, but its durability depends on something that hasn’t happened yet — the actual signing of the MOU. Layered on top of that is a second, scheduled catalyst (the BoJ-RBA-Fed-BoE cluster) that is certain to happen regardless of the Iran outcome, and that has its own potential to move regional equities in the opposite direction if any of the four central banks surprises hawkishly. The practical takeaway is: this is a trade with a real edge today and tomorrow, but the edge isn’t guaranteed to survive into next week unchanged. A trader taking this long should have a plan for what happens around 15–16 June regardless of how the position is performing — either tightening stops, taking partial profits, or being prepared to exit on a hawkish BoJ surprise even if the Iran story is still constructive. “Tactical with a defined window” means the thesis has an expiry date that isn’t about price, it’s about time and the calendar.
Given everything happening today, what’s the single most important thing for an Asian-session trader to keep in mind heading into next week?
That today’s risk-on move and next week’s central-bank cluster are answering two different questions, and a trader needs a framework for both rather than collapsing them into one “good news” narrative. Today’s Iran news answers the question “how much geopolitical risk premium should be priced into energy and risk assets?” — and the answer just moved sharply toward “less.” Next week’s BoJ-RBA-Fed-BoE cluster answers a completely different question: “how much further does monetary policy need to tighten globally, and what does that do to liquidity?” These two questions can move in the same direction or in opposite directions depending on how each event resolves. A clean Iran deal plus a dovish “hike-and-hold” BoJ would be a genuinely strong combination for risk assets across the board. But a clean Iran deal plus a hawkish BoJ that uses the easing energy-cost pressure as cover to signal a faster tightening path could see the carry-unwind dynamic dominate even a positive geopolitical backdrop — which is the scenario that has historically hit Bitcoin, the high-beta crypto complex, and yen-sensitive assets hardest. The single most useful discipline is to keep position sizes calibrated to survive either combination, take the high-conviction structural trades (copper’s deficit, for instance) as the backbone, and treat the more sentiment-driven trades (Hang Seng, the cryptos) as tactical positions with their own exit plans independent of how today’s headlines develop.

Asian Session Summary — 12 June 2026

Friday’s Asian session opens with the sharpest sentiment reversal in weeks. Late Thursday, President Trump said a US-Iran peace deal reopening the Strait of Hormuz is “largely negotiated,” sending WTI crude crashing roughly 4% to a four-week low near $86.30 and triggering a broad risk-on rotation across the region. The Hang Seng extended gains toward 24,702.6 on direct oil-import relief, copper snapped back toward $6.40 off three-week lows, and the crypto complex caught a bid with Bitcoin reclaiming $63,427.90. USD/JPY, however, remained pinned at 160.29 — right at its 52-week high and the intervention line — as the market weighs the Iran de-escalation against next week’s BoJ-RBA-Fed-BoE central-bank cluster, the most consequential of the year.

The actionable framework separates structural conviction from tactical, headline-driven positioning. Highest structural conviction: long copper on dips toward $6.25 — the ~491kt/yr supply deficit is unchanged and now reinforced by a growth-positive catalyst, targeting the $6.60 record; and short crude oil into rallies toward $89 — the war premium is unwinding toward pre-conflict levels near $80, though this is a fast-moving, headline-driven trade requiring tight risk management around MOU sign-off news. On the FX side, USD/JPY is framed as sell-rallies into 160.8–162 — the pair sits at a 52-week high with both intervention risk and a hawkish BoJ live, while AUD/USD is a cautious, smaller-size dip-buy near 0.6985 on oversold conditions and the fresh risk-on tailwind from copper and the Iran headline.

In equities and the high-beta complex, the Hang Seng is a tactical long near 24,250 on direct oil-import relief, targeting 25,800, but explicitly time-limited ahead of the 16 June BoJ decision. In crypto, Dogecoin near $0.0862 is a small-size dip-accumulation on accelerating ETF inflows and whale buying at the $0.081 support, while Litecoin near $42.50 is a tactical, defined-risk bounce off a confirmed bear-flag breakdown that needs a reclaim of $46 to upgrade the setup — both pivoting on Bitcoin holding its current bounce above $60,000. The single most important instruction for the session: treat today’s Iran-driven risk-on move and next week’s BoJ-RBA-Fed-BoE cluster as two separate questions that can reinforce or contradict each other — keep the structural copper trade as the backbone, manage the crude short around MOU headlines, size the yen- and crypto-linked positions to survive a hawkish BoJ surprise, and treat the Hang Seng and altcoin longs as tactical positions with their own exit plans into 16 June.

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Capital Street FX · Asian Session Daily Technical Analysis · Friday, 12 June 2026

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© 2026 Capital Street FX. All market data sourced from live feeds as of the Asian session open, 12 June 2026. Levels shown are schematic representations for illustration, not exchange screenshots. Key sources: TradingEconomics, Investing.com, CNBC, Reuters, Bloomberg, CoinGecko, CoinMarketCap, Coinbase, Bybit, FXStreet, Al Jazeera, Yahoo Finance, Changelly, LiteFinance, BoJ, RBA, CSFX Research Desk.