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asian sessin 03 07 2026

Kospi Rockets Past 6%, Yen Slides to a 40-Year Low, Gold Nears $4,200 as Asia Extends the Post-Payrolls Rally | Asian Session – Technical Analysis | 3 July 2026

July 3, 2026
Research Desk
Kospi Rockets Past 6%, Yen Slides to a 40-Year Low, Gold Nears $4,200 as Asia Extends the Post-Payrolls Rally | Capital Street FX Asian Session Technical Analysis · 3 July 2026
Friday, 3 July 2026  ·  Asian Session Technical Analysis ▸ KOSPI ROCKETS PAST 6% · YEN AT 40-YEAR LOW · GOLD NEARS $4,200 · HANG SENG +1.6%

Asia-Pacific Stocks rebound from early losses as South Korea jumps Past 6% and Yen stabilizes below 161.50 as intervention risks persist While Gold Eyes $4,200 and Hang Seng Tech Names Surge Following Thursday’s Weak US Jobs Report.

USD/JPY ~161.35 ▼ back above 161.00 but capped below 161.50 as the yen hovers near a fresh 40-year low with intervention risk rising · AUD/USD ~0.6950 ▲ bouncing back toward the round number as renewed US Dollar weakness offsets a soft China services PMI · Silver ~$61.20 ▲ extending Thursday’s gains and holding above $61 as traders scale back Fed rate-hike bets · WTI Crude ~$69.36 ▲ clawing back part of Thursday’s sharp slide while testing Fibonacci resistance below the $71.59 swing high · Hang Seng ~23,415 ▲ up roughly 1.6% in afternoon trade, led by a double-digit surge in Zhipu-linked tech names · Dogecoin ~$0.0752 ▲ up roughly 4% over 24 hours as the softer dollar lifts risk appetite across crypto · Cardano ~$0.162 ▲ firmer but still lagging the broader altcoin rally amid a stubborn “ghost chain” narrative · Dow Jones ~52,900 ▲ closed at a fresh record high Thursday, up nearly 595 points, after June payrolls missed badly · Kospi +6% intraday ▲ tech-driven surge triggers a trading “sidecar” halt as SK Hynix and Samsung both rally over 8%
Analyst: Capital Street FX Research Desk · Session: Tokyo · Hong Kong · Seoul · Sydney · Friday, 3 July 2026 · LIVE · DEVELOPING: Asia-Pacific equities are broadly higher in Friday afternoon trade, extending Thursday’s Wall Street rally after US nonfarm payrolls rose by just 57,000 in June, roughly half the 115,000 consensus, pushing the Dow Jones Industrial Average to a record close near 52,900. Fed funds futures now imply only a 45–53% probability of a Federal Reserve rate hike by September, down sharply from 65–67% before the report, and the resulting broadly softer US Dollar is weighing across the G10 board even as the Japanese Yen remains pinned near a 40-year low and on intervention watch ahead of Japan’s Finance Ministry. South Korea’s Kospi is the standout performer, surging more than 6% intraday and briefly triggering a trading “sidecar” halt as SK Hynix and Samsung Electronics both rally more than 8% on renewed AI-chip demand optimism. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index has added roughly 1.6%, led by Zhipu-linked technology names, while Japan’s Nikkei 225 is up more than 1% and Australia’s ASX 200 has gained 1.4%. Gold is holding just shy of $4,200 an ounce, on track for its first weekly advance in five weeks, and Silver remains above $61. Crude Oil is clawing back part of Thursday’s sharp slide as traders weigh progress in US-Iran talks in Doha against the funeral of Iran’s former Supreme Leader, which begins 4 July and could delay further negotiations. In crypto, Bitcoin remains in the low $61,000s after briefly breaking $62,000 on Thursday, while Dogecoin and Cardano are both firmer, if still lagging the broader altcoin recovery. US markets remain closed for the Independence Day holiday, with trading due to resume Monday.
Asian Session Overview

Asia-Pacific stocks rebound from early losses on Friday, with South Korea’s Kospi reversing an early dip to jump past 6% intraday on a tech-led surge, the Japanese Yen stabilizing below 161.50 as intervention risks persist, Gold eyeing $4,200, and Hang Seng tech names leading a broad regional advance as traders price in reduced odds of a Federal Reserve rate hike — all against a backdrop of thinner liquidity with Wall Street closed for the Independence Day holiday.

Thursday’s US jobs report continues to set the tone across Asia. June nonfarm payrolls rose by just 57,000 against a 115,000 consensus, while the unemployment rate unexpectedly eased to 4.2%. Markets have read the combination as a labor-market cooling that keeps the Fed on hold rather than a genuine downturn, and the CME Group’s FedWatch tool now shows the implied probability of a September Fed rate hike sitting in a 45–53% range, down from 65–67% earlier in the week. The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed Thursday at a fresh record high of 52,900.07, up 594.83 points or 1.14%, though the Nasdaq Composite slipped 0.8% and the S&P 500 finished essentially flat, underscoring a rotation away from megacap technology names even as the broader risk-on tone carried into the Asian session.

In FX, USD/JPY has stabilized around 161.35 after an early wobble, holding above the 161.00 handle but capped below 161.50 as two-way trade dominates the session. The pair remains within striking distance of its 52-week and roughly 40-year high near 161.93, and intervention risk persists as Japan’s Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama has repeated warnings that authorities stand ready to “respond appropriately” to sharp, one-sided currency moves, with reports suggesting Tokyo may abandon its usual practice of signaling intervention in advance in order to catch speculators off guard. AUD/USD is bouncing back toward 0.6950 in the Asian session, as renewed Dollar weakness offsets a soft China Caixin/RatingDog Services PMI for June and an unexpectedly wide A$3.02 billion Australian trade deficit for May, the largest since December 2015. In commodities, Gold is holding just shy of $4,200 an ounce, up roughly 1.7% and on track for its first weekly advance in five weeks, while Silver has extended Thursday’s rebound to trade above $61 an ounce. WTI Crude Oil is clawing back part of Thursday’s sharp slide, trading around $69.36 as it tests a cluster of Fibonacci resistance levels after tumbling to a low near $67.14, with the market unwinding its geopolitical war premium as US-Iran talks in Doha show constructive progress, even as the funeral of Iran’s former Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, beginning 4 July, introduces fresh uncertainty over the pace of further negotiations.

On regional equities, Asia-Pacific benchmarks opened mixed to lower before rebounding through the session, with South Korea’s Kospi the standout, reversing early losses to surge more than 6% intraday and briefly triggering a trading “sidecar” halt as SK Hynix and Samsung Electronics both rally more than 8% on renewed optimism around AI-chip demand, a sharp turnaround after the index’s roughly 8% slump earlier in the week. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index has added approximately 1.6% to trade near 23,415, led by a double-digit surge in Zhipu-linked technology name Knowledge Atlas and an 8% rally in Manycore Tech, though the index remains well below its earlier-2026 levels after a roughly 9.1% monthly decline in June. Japan’s Nikkei 225 is up more than 1%, Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 has gained 1.4%, and mainland China’s CSI 300 is higher by a similar margin. In crypto, Bitcoin remains in the low $61,000s after briefly breaking above $62,000 on Thursday before failing to hold the move, while Dogecoin has climbed roughly 4% to around $0.0752 and Cardano has added a more modest gain to trade near $0.162, both still lagging the broader altcoin recovery led by Solana and XRP. With US markets closed Friday for Independence Day, today’s Asian-session reaction is likely to carry through the weekend before Wall Street reassesses on Monday.

Top Stories

Asian Session Headlines

The stories driving price action across FX, equities, metals, energy and crypto this session

🔴 Critical
Kospi Rebounds From Early Losses to Surge Past 6%, Triggers “Sidecar” Halt
SK Hynix and Samsung Electronics both surge more than 8% on renewed AI-chip demand optimism, powering South Korea’s benchmark from an early dip to its strongest session in weeks after Thursday’s weak US jobs data cemented bets the Fed stays on hold.
Equities
🟢 High
Yen Stabilizes Below 161.50, Intervention Risk Persists
USD/JPY steadies above 161.00 after an early wobble, holding below 161.50 as Japan’s Finance Ministry stays on high alert into thin holiday liquidity, with reports Tokyo may abandon advance intervention signaling to catch speculators off guard.
Currencies
🟢 High
Gold Eyes $4,200, Silver Holds Above $61
Both metals extend Thursday’s payrolls-driven surge as Fed rate-hike odds are pared back toward the 45–53% range, with gold on track for its first weekly advance in five weeks.
Metals
🟢 Medium
Crude Oil Claws Back Part of Thursday’s Sharp Slide
WTI tests Fibonacci resistance near $69.36 as US-Iran talks in Doha show progress, though the funeral of Iran’s former Supreme Leader beginning 4 July clouds the outlook for further negotiations.
Energy
🟢 Medium
Hang Seng Adds 1.6% as Zhipu-Linked Tech Names Rally
Knowledge Atlas and Manycore Tech both surge as regional AI-related enthusiasm returns, though the index remains well off its earlier-2026 levels after a rough June.
Equities
🟢 Medium
Dogecoin, Cardano Firm Up But Lag the Broader Crypto Rally
Both tokens post modest gains as Bitcoin holds in the low $61,000s after briefly breaking $62,000 on Thursday, with Solana and XRP outperforming among the majors.
Crypto

Section 1 · Economic Calendar

Asian Session Economic Calendar — 3 July 2026

Key releases and events shaping price action across today’s Asian session with US markets closed

Asian session economic calendar for Friday, 3 July 2026, listing scheduled times, events, expectations, impact rating and market read
Time (Local) Event Actual / Detail Impact Market Read
🇰🇷Ongoing Kospi Surges >6% Intraday, Triggers Sidecar Halt SK Hynix +8%, Samsung Electronics +8% on AI-chip demand optimism 🔴 CRITICAL Tech-led short squeeze extends the post-payrolls risk-on move
🇯🇵Ongoing USD/JPY Hovers Near 40-Year Yen Low Katayama reiterates readiness to “respond appropriately” to FX moves 🔴 CRITICAL Intervention risk rising into thin holiday liquidity
🇨🇳09:45 China Caixin/RatingDog Services PMI (June) Softer print weighs modestly on regional risk sentiment 🟢 MED Caps AUD upside despite broad Dollar weakness
🇦🇺Overnight Australia Trade Balance (May) A$3.02bn deficit vs. A$1.38bn prior surplus, largest since Dec 2015 🟢 MED Weighs on AUD even as US Dollar softens broadly
🇭🇰Ongoing Hang Seng Tech Rally Led by Zhipu-Linked Names Knowledge Atlas +10%, Manycore Tech +8% 🟢 HIGH Regional extension of the AI-optimism trade
🇺🇸All Day US Markets Closed for Independence Day Full market closure 3 July 2026; trading resumes Monday 🔴 CRITICAL Thinner global liquidity may exaggerate Asian-session moves
🇮🇷4 Jul Funeral of Iran’s Former Supreme Leader Khamenei Ceremonies begin Saturday, may delay next round of Doha talks 🟢 HIGH Adds uncertainty to the crude oil war-premium unwind

Section 2 · Trade Ideas

Asian Session Trade Ideas — 3 July 2026

Seven structured setups — USD/JPY, AUD/USD, Silver, Crude Oil, Hang Seng, Dogecoin, Cardano — with updated prices, levels, and full fundamental and technical analysis

USD/JPY

FX · ~161.35 — Yen Pinned Near a Fresh 40-Year Low With Intervention Risk Rising
161.35
▼ back above 161.00 but capped below 161.50, within a 161.00–161.74 day range
▸ NEUTRAL-TO-BEARISH USD/JPY (INTERVENTION RISK) — Sell Rallies Toward 162.60 as Verbal Warnings Intensify, Though the Wide Rate Differential Keeps Carry Trades Alive
Sell Rally162.60
Stop Loss162.90
Take Profit160.00
USD/JPY daily chart with Fibonacci retracement levels
Chart by TradingView

Fundamental Backdrop

USD/JPY is trading near 161.35 in the Asian session, holding above the 161.00 handle but capped below 161.50 amid volatile two-way trade, as the yen sits at levels not seen in roughly four decades. Japan’s Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama has repeated warnings that authorities will “respond appropriately” to sharp, one-sided currency moves, and Reuters has reported that Tokyo may abandon its usual practice of signaling intervention in advance, in a bid to catch speculative yen-short positioning off guard. Katayama reportedly held online talks with US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent this week as concerns over the pace of the yen’s decline grow. Even so, the wide US-Japan interest-rate differential continues to keep the crowded yen carry trade in play, acting as a structural tailwind for the pair that verbal intervention alone has yet to reverse.

Technical Outlook

USD/JPY remains just below its 52-week and roughly 40-year high of 161.93, with the Relative Strength Index in overbought territory even as the pair consolidates. Resistance: 161.93 (this week’s high) and 162.60 (stop, next round-number extension). Support: 160.85 (the 20-day EMA, first line of defense on a pullback) and 160.00 (target, psychological level and next Fibonacci support). A decisive break below 160.00 would suggest today’s post-payrolls dollar weakness is beginning to outweigh the carry-trade bid, while any confirmed intervention could trigger a much sharper, faster reversal given how one-sided current yen-short positioning has become.

Session Catalysts

Watch for: (1) any verbal or actual intervention from Japan’s Ministry of Finance or Bank of Japan; (2) further Bessent-Katayama communications on currency stability; (3) thin holiday liquidity with US markets closed, which can exaggerate moves; (4) US Treasury yield direction when trading resumes Monday; (5) any fresh BoJ policy-normalization signals.

AUD/USD

FX · ~0.6950 — Bouncing Back Toward the Round Number as Broad Dollar Weakness Offsets a Soft China PMI
0.6950
▲ up modestly on the session, extending Thursday’s post-NFP bounce
▸ NEUTRAL-TO-BULLISH AUD/USD (SHORT-TERM BOUNCE) — Buy Dips Toward 0.6890 as Broad Dollar Weakness Offsets a Soft China PMI, Though a Bearish Daily Structure Caps Rallies
Buy Dip0.6890
Stop Loss0.6820
Take Profit0.7020
AUD/USD daily chart with Fibonacci retracement levels
Chart by TradingView

Fundamental Backdrop

AUD/USD is bouncing back toward 0.6950 in the Asian session, as renewed US Dollar weakness following Thursday’s soft payrolls print offsets a weaker-than-expected China Caixin/RatingDog Services PMI for June, given Australia’s deep trade links to China. Domestic fundamentals remain mixed: May’s trade balance unexpectedly swung to a A$3.02 billion deficit, the largest since December 2015, as exports slumped to a four-month low even as imports climbed to a fresh record high, while Q1 GDP growth of 0.3% quarter-on-quarter also missed consensus. Still on the positive side, Australia’s labor market remains healthy, with the unemployment rate ticking down to 4.4% in May and employment rising by 40,600.

Technical Outlook

On the daily chart, AUD/USD trades below both its 55-day and 100-day simple moving averages near 0.7105 and 0.7074 respectively, keeping a bearish near-term tone, while holding above the 200-day SMA at roughly 0.6866, which continues to act as a structural floor. Resistance: 0.7020 (target, near the 100-day SMA cluster) and 0.7074 (the 55-day SMA, a tougher ceiling above that). Support: 0.6890 (preferred buy-dip level) and 0.6820 (stop, below the recent multi-week range). A sustained close above 0.7074 would ease the bearish structure, while a break below 0.6820 would risk a retest of the 200-day SMA near 0.6866 and beyond.

Session Catalysts

Watch for: (1) further China PMI and trade-data follow-through; (2) any RBA commentary on the rate outlook; (3) continued US Dollar reaction to Thursday’s payrolls miss; (4) iron ore and broader commodity-price direction; (5) thinner holiday liquidity with US markets closed.

Silver (XAG/USD)

Metals · ~$61.20 — Extending Thursday’s Gains as Fed Hike Odds Are Pared Back
~$61.20
▲ holding above $61, extending Thursday’s rebound off seven-month lows
▸ BULLISH SILVER (SHORT-TERM) — Buy Dips Toward $59.50 as Reduced Fed Hike Odds Provide a Tailwind, Though June’s Historic Selloff Leaves the Recovery Fragile
Buy Dip$59.50
Stop Loss$57.50
Take Profit$64.00
Silver daily chart with Fibonacci retracement levels
Chart by TradingView

Fundamental Backdrop

Silver is holding above $61 an ounce in the Asian session, extending Thursday’s rebound off recent seven-month lows as weaker-than-expected June US jobs data prompted traders to scale back bets on further Federal Reserve rate hikes, with Fed funds futures now implying roughly a 45–53% probability of a September hike, down from 65–67% before the report. The move follows one of the most violent periods in the metal’s history: silver tumbled more than 20% in June alone, its steepest monthly decline since September 2011, after Fed Chair Kevin Warsh’s more hawkish policy stance and a stronger dollar triggered heavy leveraged liquidation through the second quarter. Today’s bounce also draws support from lower oil prices and easing inflation concerns as shipping through the Strait of Hormuz continues to recover.

Technical Outlook

Silver’s 14-day Relative Strength Index sank toward oversold territory in late June before the metal began bouncing, and today’s move extends that recovery attempt. Resistance: $62.00 (near-term ceiling) and $64.00 (target, next extension on continued follow-through). Support: $59.50 (preferred buy-dip level, near the pre-bounce consolidation zone) and $57.50 (stop, below this week’s low). Given the scale of June’s collapse, gold’s correlated price action and the US Dollar Index remain the key swing factors; a reversal back below $57.50 would suggest today’s bounce was a payrolls-driven relief spike rather than a genuine trend shift.

Session Catalysts

Watch for: (1) continued US Dollar Index reaction to the payrolls miss; (2) gold’s correlated price action; (3) any fresh Fed commentary on the rate path; (4) industrial demand signals from solar, EV and AI-hardware sectors; (5) thinner holiday liquidity into the weekend.

Crude Oil (WTI)

Energy · ~$69.36 — Clawing Back Part of Thursday’s Sharp Slide as It Tests Fibonacci Resistance
~$69.36
▲ recovering from Thursday’s low near $67.14, testing the 50% Fibonacci retracement
▸ NEUTRAL-TO-BEARISH CRUDE OIL — Sell Rallies Toward $69.89 as the War-Premium Unwind Continues, Though the Khamenei Funeral Adds Uncertainty to the Doha Talks
Sell Rally$69.89
Stop Loss$70.60
Take Profit$67.15
WTI Crude Oil daily chart with Fibonacci retracement levels
Chart by TradingView

Fundamental Backdrop

WTI Crude Oil is clawing back part of Thursday’s sharp slide, trading around $69.36 after tumbling from a swing high near $71.59 to a low around $67.14, as the market continues to unwind its geopolitical war premium. US negotiators report constructive progress in indirect talks with Iran held in Doha, with the United Arab Emirates having restored exports to more than 3.9 million barrels per day and Saudi Arabia ramping up flows to Asia, pushing total Strait of Hormuz shipping above 10 million barrels a day. However, upcoming talks reportedly face delays tied to the funeral of Iran’s former Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, which begins 4 July, while Tehran continues to demand a greater degree of maritime control over the strait, keeping geopolitical friction elevated even as physical supply normalizes.

Technical Outlook

WTI is in the midst of a pullback toward a descending trendline and a cluster of Fibonacci resistance levels following its sharp drop from recent highs. The 38.2% retracement near $68.40 has already been reclaimed, and price is now testing the 50% level at $69.36, which lines up closely with the trendline that has capped rallies since late June. Resistance: $69.89 (preferred sell-rally level, the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement) and $70.60 (stop, above the swing high area). Support: $67.15 (target, near this week’s low) and the 52-week low of $54.98 remaining the structural floor further out. A clean break above $69.89 would open the way toward a retest of $71.59.

Session Catalysts

Watch for: (1) any formal confirmation or breakdown in the Doha talks; (2) developments around the Khamenei funeral and any resulting delay to negotiations; (3) Strait of Hormuz tanker-traffic data; (4) broader US Dollar direction, given oil’s inverse dollar correlation; (5) thinner holiday liquidity with US markets closed.

Hang Seng Index

Index · ~23,415 — Adding Roughly 1.6% as Zhipu-Linked Tech Names Rally
~23,415
▲ up roughly 1.6% in afternoon trade, led by a double-digit tech surge
▸ BULLISH HANG SENG (SHORT-TERM) — Buy Dips Toward 23,050 as Tech-Led Risk Appetite Returns, Though June’s Steep Monthly Drop Warrants Caution
Buy Dip23,050
Stop Loss22,700
Take Profit23,900
Hang Seng Index daily chart with Fibonacci retracement levels
Chart by TradingView

Fundamental Backdrop

The Hang Seng Index has added roughly 1.6% to trade near 23,415, extending Thursday’s close of 23,055.03 as regional risk appetite improves following the weak US payrolls print and the resulting pullback in Fed rate-hike odds. Gains are being led by technology names tied to the AI theme, with Zhipu-linked Knowledge Atlas surging nearly 10% and Manycore Tech jumping 8%, echoing the broader AI-driven rally seen across South Korean and Taiwanese chip names this session. The bounce follows a difficult June for Hong Kong equities, in which the Hang Seng dropped roughly 9.1% for the month and 7.6% for the quarter, its weakest stretch of the year, as investors weighed lingering uncertainty over China’s economic recovery and concerns that Chinese stocks were lagging the global AI-driven rally.

Technical Outlook

The index is attempting to stabilize after last month’s steep decline, with today’s rally testing the upper end of its recent multi-week consolidation range. Resistance: 23,900 (near-term ceiling) and 24,200 (target, next extension on continued follow-through). Support: 23,050 (preferred buy-dip level, near Thursday’s close) and 22,700 (stop, below this week’s pullback low). A sustained close above 23,900 would suggest June’s selloff is giving way to a more durable recovery, while a reversal below 22,700 would reopen the path toward the index’s recent lows.

Session Catalysts

Watch for: (1) further mainland China PMI and stimulus-related headlines; (2) additional AI-chip and technology-sector news flow; (3) broader US Dollar and Fed-odds direction; (4) any fresh regulatory developments affecting Hong Kong-listed internet and tech names; (5) Monday’s reopening of US markets.

Dogecoin (DOGE/USD)

Crypto · ~$0.0752 — Up Roughly 4% as the Softer Dollar Lifts Risk Appetite
~$0.0752
▲ up roughly 4% over 24 hours, though still lagging the broader altcoin rally
▸ NEUTRAL-TO-BULLISH DOGECOIN — Buy Dips Toward $0.071 as Broader Risk Appetite Improves, Though Technical Momentum Remains Oversold
Buy Dip$0.071
Stop Loss$0.068
Take Profit$0.082
Dogecoin daily chart with Fibonacci retracement levels
Chart by TradingView

Fundamental Backdrop

Dogecoin has climbed roughly 4% over the past 24 hours to trade near $0.0752, tracking the broader crypto market’s improved risk appetite after Thursday’s weak US payrolls print reduced near-term Fed hike odds and weighed on the US Dollar. As the largest meme coin by market capitalization, DOGE’s moves remain driven primarily by sentiment and liquidity rather than steady fundamentals, and the token continues to lag more idiosyncratic altcoin outperformers such as Solana and XRP this session. Longer-running catalysts include continued speculation around potential DOGE integration into X’s payments platform and ongoing interest in regulated spot exposure following the SEC/CFTC’s classification of Dogecoin as a digital commodity, though neither has produced fresh news today.

Technical Outlook

Dogecoin’s daily Relative Strength Index has been sitting in oversold territory in recent sessions, a setup that historically precedes short-term bounces, and today’s move fits that pattern. Resistance: $0.078 (near-term ceiling) and $0.082 (target, next extension on continued follow-through). Support: $0.071 (preferred buy-dip level) and $0.068 (stop, below this week’s low). Given DOGE’s uncapped supply and history of fading rallies without sustained follow-through, a reversal back below $0.068 would suggest today’s bounce is a liquidity-driven spike rather than the start of a genuine trend shift.

Session Catalysts

Watch for: (1) broader Bitcoin and total crypto market-cap direction; (2) any fresh X Payments or Musk-related headlines; (3) US Dollar Index and Fed-odds direction; (4) weekend headline risk given thinner holiday liquidity; (5) DOGE-specific social-sentiment and whale-wallet activity.

Cardano (ADA/USD)

Crypto · ~$0.162 — Firmer But Still Lagging the Broader Altcoin Rally
~$0.162
▲ modestly higher on the session, underperforming Solana and XRP
▸ NEUTRAL CARDANO — Buy Dips Toward $0.155 as the Broader Altcoin Rally Offers Support, Though the “Ghost Chain” Narrative Keeps Rallies Capped
Buy Dip$0.155
Stop Loss$0.148
Take Profit$0.175
Cardano daily chart with Fibonacci retracement levels
Chart by TradingView

Fundamental Backdrop

Cardano is trading modestly higher near $0.162, drawing some support from the broader crypto market’s improved risk appetite following Thursday’s weak US jobs data, though it continues to underperform peers such as Solana and XRP. ADA has struggled to shake off a persistent “ghost chain” narrative among traders questioning the pace of real on-chain adoption, and sentiment took a further hit after Cardano’s 2026 Summit was canceled when a treasury funding proposal failed to secure necessary community support, prompting founder Charles Hoskinson to announce a break amid the ecosystem’s challenges. On a more constructive note, the network’s Leios Musashi Dojo testnet, aimed at enhancing scalability, launched in late June, and on-chain data shows larger ADA whale wallets have continued accumulating even as overall network activity sits near a 45-day low.

Technical Outlook

Cardano remains stuck in a tight, range-bound structure, with today’s bounce doing little to change the token’s broader technical picture. Resistance: $0.170 (near-term ceiling) and $0.175 (target, next extension on a confirmed breakout). Support: $0.155 (preferred buy-dip level) and $0.148 (stop, below the recent range low). For ADA to make a more convincing move, traders generally want to see sustained outperformance against Bitcoin (a rising ADA/BTC ratio) alongside improving on-chain metrics such as total value locked and active addresses, rather than a move driven purely by broad market beta.

Session Catalysts

Watch for: (1) broader Bitcoin and altcoin-market direction; (2) any follow-through from the Leios Musashi Dojo testnet rollout; (3) ADA/BTC relative-strength trends; (4) whale-wallet accumulation data; (5) further community or governance-related developments following the canceled 2026 Summit.


Section 3 · FAQ

Asian Session FAQ — 3 July 2026

Answers to the questions traders are asking about today’s Asian session price action

South Korea’s market is highly concentrated in a small number of large semiconductor names, so a shift in the AI-chip demand narrative tends to produce outsized index-level moves compared with the more diversified S&P 500 or Dow. Today’s surge is being led by SK Hynix and Samsung Electronics, both up more than 8%, as reduced Fed rate-hike odds following Thursday’s weak payrolls print improve the broader case for risk assets generally, and AI-chip demand optimism specifically. Because these two stocks carry such heavy index weight, a coordinated rally in both can move the Kospi far more sharply, in percentage terms, than a similar improvement in sentiment moves a broader, more balanced index like the S&P 500. The trading “sidecar” halt triggered today is itself a sign of how concentrated and fast-moving the buying pressure has been.

Currency intervention is expensive and can only be deployed a limited number of times before it loses credibility, so Japanese authorities tend to prefer verbal warnings first, reserving actual intervention for moments when it will have maximum market impact. Reports suggest Tokyo may be waiting for a moment of thin liquidity, such as during the current US Independence Day holiday, when a smaller amount of yen-buying can have an outsized effect on the exchange rate, precisely because fewer market participants are actively trading. There is also a coordination angle: Finance Minister Katayama reportedly held talks with US Treasury Secretary Bessent this week, and any intervention carries more weight and durability if it comes with at least tacit acknowledgment from Washington. Because the wide US-Japan rate differential is what’s structurally driving the yen’s decline, intervention alone, without a shift in that rate gap, historically produces only a temporary reversal rather than a lasting trend change.

Gold is reacting to the change in probability, not an outright dovish shift, and that distinction matters for the size of the move. Going into Thursday’s jobs report, markets had priced in a 65–67% chance of a September hike; the reduction to roughly 45–53% is meaningful, but it still leaves a Fed hike as a live possibility rather than an abandoned path. That’s a genuine, if partial, improvement in the near-term rate outlook, which explains why gold has rallied toward $4,200 without staging a much larger move. Gold is also still recovering from a brutal second quarter, in which it fell more than 11% in June alone alongside a sharp silver selloff, so today’s bounce is occurring against a backdrop of caution about how durable the recovery will prove, rather than outright euphoria.

Today’s bounce looks more like a technical pause within an ongoing downtrend than a genuine reversal of the broader unwind. WTI has been sliding for weeks as shipping through the Strait of Hormuz normalizes, with the UAE and Saudi Arabia both restoring and ramping up export flows, so the structural bearish driver, a fading supply-disruption risk, remains firmly in place. Today’s price action is testing a well-defined cluster of Fibonacci resistance levels around a descending trendline that has capped every rally since late June, which is a classic pattern for a corrective bounce rather than a trend change. The one wrinkle is the funeral of Iran’s former Supreme Leader beginning 4 July, which could delay the next round of Doha talks and introduce some near-term uncertainty, but that is more likely to slow the pace of the war-premium unwind than reverse it outright.

Both tokens are benefiting from the same broad risk-on tailwind lifting Bitcoin and the wider crypto market today, but neither has an idiosyncratic catalyst strong enough to make it outperform, the way Solana’s staking-enabled ETF inflows or governance updates have done recently. Dogecoin’s price action is driven almost entirely by sentiment and liquidity rather than steady on-chain fundamentals, which makes its rallies prone to fading without sustained follow-through buying. Cardano, meanwhile, is contending with a more specific reputational headwind: a persistent “ghost chain” narrative among traders skeptical of the pace of genuine on-chain adoption, compounded by the recent cancellation of its 2026 Summit after a treasury funding proposal failed. Both tokens can still participate in a broad market rally, but a more convincing move typically requires them to outperform Bitcoin on a relative basis for a sustained period, rather than simply following the wider tape higher for a single session.

It matters more than usual, precisely because US markets are shut. With one of the world’s deepest liquidity pools offline, price discovery across FX, commodities and crypto this session is happening in a thinner, more Asia-and-Europe-driven order book, which can amplify moves in either direction, for better or worse. That’s part of why Japan’s Ministry of Finance is seen as watching today’s session closely for a potential intervention opportunity, and why a relatively contained news flow item, like South Korean chip-stock strength, can move an index by more than 6%. The practical implication for traders is that today’s price action should be read as directionally informative, since it reflects genuine repositioning after Thursday’s jobs data, but with wider potential for reversal once US liquidity returns Monday and a broader base of participants gets to react to the same information.

Asian Session Summary — Friday, 3 July 2026

Friday’s Asian session extends the relief rally that began with Thursday’s weak US payrolls report, in which June nonfarm payrolls rose by just 57,000 against a 115,000 consensus, pushing the Dow Jones Industrial Average to a record close of 52,900.07. Fed funds futures now imply only a 45–53% probability of a September rate hike, down from 65–67% before the report, and that shift is rippling across Asia. South Korea’s Kospi has surged more than 6% intraday, briefly triggering a trading “sidecar” halt as SK Hynix and Samsung Electronics both rally over 8% on renewed AI-chip demand optimism, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng has added roughly 1.6% on a Zhipu-linked technology rally, and Japan’s Nikkei 225 and Australia’s ASX 200 are both firmer. The Japanese Yen remains the session’s most closely watched risk, pinned near a roughly 40-year low against the dollar with USD/JPY holding above 161.00, as Japan’s Finance Ministry keeps intervention warnings live into a session with US markets closed for Independence Day. Gold is holding just shy of $4,200 and Silver above $61 as reduced Fed hike odds provide a tailwind, while WTI Crude Oil is clawing back part of Thursday’s sharp slide as it tests Fibonacci resistance, with the funeral of Iran’s former Supreme Leader beginning 4 July adding a fresh wrinkle to the Doha talks. In crypto, Dogecoin and Cardano are both firmer but continue to lag a broader altcoin rally led by Solana and XRP, as Bitcoin holds in the low $61,000s after briefly breaking $62,000 on Thursday. Highest-conviction macro: fade USD/JPY rallies toward 162.60, stop 162.90, target 160.00 — intervention risk is rising into thin holiday liquidity, even as the wide rate differential keeps the underlying carry trade intact, making this a high-reward, high-volatility setup best sized cautiously.

For the individual instruments: USD/JPY sell rallies toward 162.60, stop 162.90, target 160.00 — verbal intervention warnings are intensifying, though the carry trade remains a genuine structural headwind to any sustained yen recovery. AUD/USD buy dips toward 0.6890, stop 0.6820, target 0.7020 — broad dollar weakness offers near-term support, though a weak China PMI and Australia’s trade-deficit surprise cap the scope of any rally. Silver buy dips toward $59.50, stop $57.50, target $64.00 — reduced Fed hike odds provide a genuine tailwind, though June’s historic collapse argues for a disciplined stop given how fragile the recovery remains. Crude Oil sell rallies toward $69.89, stop $70.60, target $67.15 — the structural war-premium unwind should continue to dominate, though the Khamenei funeral is a genuine near-term wildcard that could delay the next leg lower. Hang Seng buy dips toward 23,050, stop 22,700, target 23,900 — today’s tech-led bounce is constructive, though June’s steep monthly decline means the recovery still needs to prove its durability. Dogecoin buy dips toward $0.071, stop $0.068, target $0.082 — today’s bounce fits oversold technical conditions and improving broad risk appetite, though DOGE’s history of fading rallies without follow-through argues for disciplined position sizing. Cardano buy dips toward $0.155, stop $0.148, target $0.175 — the broader altcoin rally offers some support, though the persistent “ghost chain” narrative and recent governance setbacks continue to cap enthusiasm until on-chain metrics show a clearer trend. The decisive variable for the remainder of the session is whether Japan’s Ministry of Finance chooses to act on its intervention warnings while US liquidity remains thin, and whether today’s broad Asian risk-on move can hold through the weekend ahead of Wall Street’s return on Monday. Size positions accordingly, and note that today’s holiday-thinned conditions mean moves that look decisive now may need to be reassessed once full global liquidity resumes.

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Capital Street FX · Asian Session Daily Technical Analysis · Friday, 3 July 2026

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© 2026 Capital Street FX. All market data sourced from live feeds as of the Asian session, 3 July 2026. Key sources: Investing.com, FXStreet, Reuters/CNBC, TradingEconomics, CoinGecko, CoinMarketCap, CSFX Research Desk. Prices are indicative intraday levels and may differ from your broker’s feed.