Week Ahead: Dow Jones Notches Record Highs as Oil Slides on Hormuz Reopening, Gold Rebounds on Soft Jobs Data, and Bitcoin Claws Back From Extreme Fear | US Weekly Analysis | 6–10 July 2026
Week Ahead: Dow Jones Notches Record Highs as Oil Slides on Hormuz Reopening, Gold Rebounds on Soft Jobs Data, and Bitcoin Claws Back From Extreme Fear
FOMC June Meeting Minutes Wed 8 Jul · ISM Services PMI Mon 6 Jul · US-Iran Talks & Strait of Hormuz Watch · Full US session trade ideas and economic calendar for week of 6–10 July 2026
USD/CAD at 1.4200 enters the week consolidating near its highest levels since roughly last November, having climbed from a 2026 low near 1.3486 in January as the US dollar broadly firmed on a hawkish-leaning Fed reaction function. The Bank of Canada held its policy rate unchanged at 2.25% at its most recent meeting, characterizing risks to inflation and employment as two-sided while reiterating it stands ready to act if needed. With no fresh BoC decision this week, USD/CAD’s near-term direction is likely to hinge more on the broad-dollar side of the equation — chiefly Wednesday’s FOMC minutes — than on Canada-specific catalysts, though Tuesday’s Ivey PMI print will offer a fresh read on Canadian business conditions.
USD/CHF at 0.8032 has retraced from a one-year high of 0.8139 touched on 24 June, as Thursday’s soft US payrolls print gave the franc some breathing room after a month in which it weakened more than 6% from January’s lows. The Swiss National Bank held its policy rate at 0% for a fourth consecutive meeting, revising its inflation outlook higher while reiterating a willingness to intervene in FX markets “if necessary” — language that keeps a floor under franc weakness even as the SNB stays on hold. Thursday’s Swiss unemployment data is this week’s key domestic release, but like USD/CAD, the pair’s larger swing factor remains the US side of the ledger heading into Wednesday’s Fed minutes.
Gold at $4,174.71 has staged one of the sharper rebounds across global markets this week, clawing back from an eight-month low near $3,972 that was itself the year’s largest single decline as the Iran-conflict war premium evaporated. The metal’s bounce has been driven almost entirely by a shift in Fed-hike expectations — Chair Warsh’s Sintra remarks that inflation expectations have eased, combined with Thursday’s weak payrolls data — rather than any change to gold’s own supply-demand backdrop, which central-bank buying continues to support. WTI crude at $68.73 tells the inverse story: prices have fallen to their lowest level since February as the United Arab Emirates restored oil exports above 3.9 million barrels per day and combined Strait of Hormuz flows surged past 10 million barrels daily, even as renewed Doha peace talks face a delay tied to the funeral of Iran’s former Supreme Leader.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average at 52,900.00 is the standout US equity story this week, closing at a fresh record high as capital rotated decisively into blue-chip industrials, healthcare and consumer names while AI-linked semiconductor stocks — Micron, Applied Materials, AMD, Sandisk — sold off sharply on valuation concerns following their explosive first-half rally. The US 10-year Treasury yield at 4.48% sits in a genuine holding pattern, torn between the Fed’s hawkish-leaning June hold — which left roughly half of FOMC members projecting at least one more 2026 hike — and Thursday’s weak jobs data, which argues for patience. In crypto, Bitcoin at $62,641.86 has rebounded more than 7% off June’s worst monthly close in four years, though the Crypto Fear & Greed Index remains firmly in Extreme Fear at 21, while XRP at $1.131 is holding comfortably above a level technicians say must be reclaimed and defended for its own recovery to look credible.
Three Forces That Will Drive the US Session — 6 to 10 July 2026
The catalysts, decisions, and data points that will set the direction across FX, commodities, equities, rates, and digital assets in the week ahead
US Session Weekly Trade Ideas
Eight instrument-specific setups with entry, stop, and target levels for the week of 6–10 July 2026. All levels for reference only; not financial advice. Visit capitalstreetfx.com for live signals.
Thesis — Range Trade 1.4100–1.4270; Broad Dollar Strength Offsets Oil-Driven CAD Support
USD/CAD at 1.4200 is consolidating just below its recent seven-month high of 1.4236, caught between two roughly offsetting forces. On one side, the broad US dollar remains supported by a genuinely hawkish-leaning Fed reaction function following June’s hold, in which roughly half of FOMC members projected further tightening this year. On the other, the Canadian dollar has found some support from the sharp decline in oil prices being offset by the Bank of Canada’s own on-hold stance at 2.25% and a resilient domestic growth picture. With no fresh BoC decision this week, CSFX sees this as a genuine two-way range trade pending clarity from Wednesday’s FOMC minutes.
The entry at 1.4100 reflects a buy against the lower end of the recent range, with a stop at 1.4020 placed below the base of the multi-week consolidation. The take profit at 1.4270 targets a retest of the range high just above this week’s peak. CSFX recommends monitoring Wednesday’s FOMC minutes closely — a hawkish-leaning account would likely extend USD/CAD’s climb toward 1.44, while confirmation of internal Fed division could see the pair fade back toward 1.40.
Thesis — Buy the Pullback Toward 0.7980; Broader Bullish Structure Remains Intact
USD/CHF at 0.8032 has pulled back roughly 1% from the one-year high of 0.8139 touched on 24 June, giving back some ground after Thursday’s soft US jobs report trimmed the dollar’s recent momentum. CSFX’s framework treats this as a corrective pullback within a broader bullish structure rather than a genuine trend change: the pair remains up sharply from January’s lows, the Swiss National Bank has explicitly flagged a willingness to intervene against further franc strength, and technical support in the 0.8040–0.8050 zone has been described by chart-based analysts as a high-conviction institutional accumulation area. Thursday’s Swiss unemployment data is a secondary release that is unlikely to overturn this dynamic on its own.
The entry at 0.7980 reflects a buy on a deeper pullback toward the 61.8% retracement of the recent rally, with a stop at 0.7900 placed below the level that would invalidate the broader uptrend. The take profit at 0.8140 targets a retest of the recent one-year high. Wednesday’s FOMC minutes are the key risk event — a dovish-leaning surprise would likely deepen this pullback before the broader bullish trend can reassert itself.
Thesis — Buy Dips Toward $4,050 as Fading Fed-Hike Odds Restore Gold’s Appeal
Gold at $4,174.71 has staged a sharp rebound off an eight-month low near $3,972 — itself the year’s largest single decline as the Iran-conflict war premium evaporated on de-escalating tensions and falling oil prices. The proximate catalyst for this week’s bounce has been almost entirely a shift in Fed-hike expectations: Chair Warsh’s acknowledgment that inflation expectations have eased, combined with Thursday’s weak payrolls data, cut September hike odds to roughly 50% from around 67% beforehand. Central-bank gold buying — net-positive through the first half of 2026 per World Gold Council data — continues to provide a structural floor beneath the metal even through its recent correction.
The entry at $4,050 reflects a buy on a pullback toward the breakout zone from earlier this week, with a stop at $3,950 placed below the recent eight-month low to invalidate the recovery thesis. The take profit at $4,350 targets a retracement back toward levels last seen in mid-June. Wednesday’s FOMC minutes are the key scheduled catalyst — a genuinely dovish-leaning account would likely extend this bounce, while confirmation of hawkish internal debate could cap gains and reintroduce two-way risk.
Thesis — Fade Rallies Toward $71.50 as Hormuz Supply Normalization Dominates
WTI crude at $68.73 has fallen to its lowest level since February, unwinding the bulk of the Iran-conflict war premium as the United Arab Emirates restored oil exports above 3.9 million barrels per day and combined shipping flows through the Strait of Hormuz surged past 10 million barrels daily. Saudi Arabia’s crude exports have similarly rebounded to roughly 90% of pre-war levels. CSFX’s framework is that this supply-side normalization should continue to dominate price action in the near term, with the main risk being a breakdown in the renewed Doha peace talks — already delayed by the funeral of Iran’s former Supreme Leader — or a resurgence of tanker-safety incidents in the strait.
The entry at $71.50 reflects fading a bounce back toward the descending trendline that has capped rallies since late June, with a stop at $73.80 placed above the recent swing high to protect against a genuine escalation surprise. The take profit at $64.00 targets a continuation of the current downtrend toward levels last seen before the conflict began. CSFX recommends reduced position sizing given the binary nature of the geopolitical risk still embedded in this trade.
Thesis — Buy Dips Toward 52,000 as the “Great Rotation” Into Blue-Chips Continues
The Dow Jones at 52,900.00 closed the week at a fresh record high, extending a “Great Rotation” in which capital has flowed out of richly-valued AI and semiconductor names — Micron, Applied Materials, AMD and Sandisk all fell sharply this week on valuation concerns after more than doubling in the first half of 2026 — and into traditional blue-chip industrials, healthcare, and consumer names. This rotation has proven a genuine tailwind for the Dow specifically even as the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite has struggled, and CSFX’s framework is that this dynamic can persist so long as the soft-landing narrative — supported by Thursday’s weak but not recessionary jobs data — remains intact.
The entry at 52,000 reflects a buy on a pullback toward the psychological round-number level and the base of this week’s rally, with a stop at 50,800 placed below the prior consolidation range to guard against a genuine risk-off reversal. The take profit at 54,500 targets a continuation of the current record-high trajectory. Monday’s ISM Services PMI and Wednesday’s FOMC minutes are the week’s key scheduled risks, with any signal of a materially hawkish Fed reaction function the clearest threat to this rotation-driven rally.
Thesis — Fade the Yield Rise Toward 4.55%; Soft Jobs Data Should Cap Further Upside
The US 10-year Treasury yield at 4.48% has held firm since the Fed’s genuinely hawkish-leaning June hold, at which roughly half of FOMC members projected at least one more 2026 hike. That hawkish tone sits somewhat awkwardly alongside Thursday’s soft June payrolls report — just 57,000 jobs added against a roughly 115,000 forecast, with material downward revisions to prior months — and Chair Warsh’s own acknowledgment that inflation expectations have eased. CSFX’s framework is that Wednesday’s FOMC minutes should help resolve this tension, and that a more dovish-leaning account revealing genuine internal committee division is the more likely outcome given the intervening drop in oil prices and softening labor-market data.
The trade here is framed as fading a further rise in yields (i.e., expecting Treasury prices to recover) toward 4.55%, with a stop at 4.62% above the level that would signal the Fed’s hawkish June stance is more durable than currently priced, and a target at 4.35% reflecting a retracement back toward the prior seven-week low. This is a genuine two-way risk trade, and CSFX recommends reduced position sizing given Wednesday’s FOMC minutes and Thursday’s jobless claims data could move yields sharply in either direction.
Thesis — Buy Dips Toward $58,000 as Bitcoin Clears Key Resistance Out of Extreme Fear
Bitcoin at $62,641.86 has rebounded more than 7% off June’s close near $58,526 — its weakest monthly performance in four years — as dovish Fed commentary and reduced hike odds lifted broad risk-asset sentiment into the new month. The Crypto Fear & Greed Index has improved to 21 but remains firmly in Extreme Fear territory, a level it has held for the entire past month, underscoring how fragile this bounce still is. Price has now cleared the immediate resistance near $62,000, reinforced by the 20-day EMA and a Parabolic SAR flip; holding above that zone as new support would open a path toward $66,200, while a failure to hold $60,000 would risk a retest of Bitcoin’s realized price near $53,000.
The entry at $58,000 reflects a buy on a pullback toward the recent breakout base, with a stop at $54,500 placed below the level that would signal a resumption of June’s downtrend. The take profit at $68,000 targets a continuation toward the next major resistance zone. CSFX recommends conservative position sizing given persistent spot Bitcoin ETF outflows and elevated whale-driven volatility even within this recovering structure.
Thesis — Accumulate on Dips Toward $1.00; $1.10 Reclaim Is the Line Between Recovery and Relapse
XRP at $1.131 has climbed roughly 8% this week after tumbling 22% in June to its weakest level since late 2024, reclaiming a level that market technicians have flagged as the one XRP “must hold before the recovery looks convincing.” The bounce has been supported by a market-wide short squeeze that liquidated roughly $281 million in bearish bets, a fresh SuperTrend buy signal on the 4-hour chart, new wallet creation at a three-month high, and Ripple’s RLUSD stablecoin surpassing $2.5 billion in settled volume on the XRP Ledger. A favorable seasonal backdrop also supports the bullish case — XRP has not closed a July in the red since 2020. The July 17 CLARITY Act Senate hearing, which would classify XRP as a commodity under US law, is the nearest major regulatory catalyst, though its full Senate floor vote has already slipped to late July or early August.
The entry at $1.00 reflects accumulation on a pullback toward the critical psychological support level, with a stop at $0.90 placed below the zone that would signal a genuine breakdown in the recovery thesis. The take profit at $1.35 targets a retest of levels last seen before June’s sharp decline. Given XRP’s high-beta relationship with Bitcoin, position sizing should remain conservative and closely tied to whether BTC can hold above its own $62,000 support-turned-resistance level this week.
What Could Move US Markets Sharply This Week
The scheduled and unscheduled events that CSFX is watching most closely for the US session, 6–10 July 2026
US Session — Economic Calendar, 6–10 July 2026
All times approximate, Eastern Time (ET). Key releases for USD/CAD, USD/CHF, Gold, Crude Oil, Dow Jones, US 10Y, Bitcoin, and XRP.
| Day | Time (ET) | Release | Impact | Forecast | CSFX View |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Monday, 6 July | |||||
| Mon | 09:45 ET | US ISM Services PMI (June) | HIGH | 51.5 | The week’s first major US data point. A stronger print supports the Dow’s soft-landing rally; a miss reinforces concerns that Thursday’s labor-market softening is broadening into services activity. |
| Mon | 15:00 ET | US Consumer Credit (May) | LOW | +$15.0B | A secondary gauge of household borrowing appetite. Unlikely to move markets on its own but feeds the broader consumer-health picture ahead of Wednesday’s FOMC minutes. |
| Tuesday, 7 July | |||||
| Tue | 08:30 ET | US Trade Balance (May) | MED | −$70.5B | A secondary input for dollar sentiment. A narrower-than-expected deficit would offer modest dollar support; a wider gap would align with broader growth-concern narratives. |
| Tue | 10:00 ET | Canada Ivey PMI (June) | MED | 53.0 | The key scheduled catalyst for USD/CAD this week given no BoC decision is due. A strong print would offer modest support to the Canadian dollar; a weak print would reinforce the pair’s recent strength toward 1.4270. |
| Tue | 16:30 ET | API Weekly Crude Oil Stock Change | MED | −2.0M bbl | An early read ahead of Wednesday’s official EIA data. A larger-than-expected draw would offer near-term support to WTI; a build would reinforce CSFX’s bearish oil framework. |
| Wednesday, 8 July | |||||
| Wed | 10:30 ET | EIA Weekly Petroleum Status Report | HIGH | −3.0M bbl | The key scheduled catalyst for WTI crude. A larger-than-expected draw would offer a near-term counterweight to the Hormuz-reopening narrative; a build reinforces the fade-the-rally framework. |
| Wed | 14:00 ET | FOMC Minutes of the June Meeting | HIGH | N/A | The week’s single most important release. A hawkish-leaning account supports the dollar and yields while pressuring gold and equities; a dovish-leaning account revealing genuine internal division would likely extend this week’s risk-asset rally. |
| Thursday, 9 July | |||||
| Thu | 08:30 ET | US Initial Jobless Claims | HIGH | 240K | The most timely available labor-market read following last week’s weak payrolls report. A sustained rise reinforces the case for Fed patience; a decline back toward recent lows complicates the dovish narrative. |
| Thu | 08:30 ET | US Wholesale Inventories (May) | LOW | +0.2% MoM | A secondary gauge of business inventory conditions. Unlikely to be a major market mover this week given the more significant releases scheduled the same day. |
| Thu | 04:00 ET | Swiss Unemployment Rate (June) | MED | 2.5% | The key domestic Swiss release this week. A stronger labor market would offer modest franc support against a still-elevated USD/CHF; a weaker print would reinforce the case for continued SNB caution on rates. |
| Friday, 10 July | |||||
| Fri | 14:00 ET | US Monthly Treasury Statement (June) | LOW | N/A | A secondary fiscal release. Watched more closely by rates traders for signs of widening deficits that could pressure longer-dated Treasury yields over time rather than this week specifically. |
| Fri | All Day | Bitcoin & XRP Weekly ETF Flow Data | MED | N/A | A reversal of recent spot Bitcoin ETF outflows would reinforce the bullish case for BTC holding above $62,000; continued positive XRP ETF inflows would support the case for XRP holding above $1.10. |
US Session — Trader Questions Answered
Key questions from CSFX clients ahead of Wednesday’s FOMC minutes, oil’s unwinding war premium, the Dow’s record run, and crypto’s fragile bounce out of Extreme Fear
CSFX View: FOMC Minutes Take Center Stage as Oil’s War Premium Unwinds, the Dow Hits Record Highs, and Crypto Tests Its Bounce Out of Extreme Fear
The week of 6–10 July 2026 presents a US session dominated by a single question carried over from last week’s holiday-shortened trading: does the Fed’s genuinely hawkish-leaning June hold survive Thursday’s weak jobs data, or does Wednesday’s FOMC minutes release confirm a committee more internally divided than markets currently appreciate. USD/CAD at 1.4200 and USD/CHF at 0.8032 both sit closer to the dollar-bullish side of their recent ranges, though the franc has pulled back further on this week’s dollar softness. In commodities, gold at $4,174.71 has staged a sharp rebound off an eight-month low as fading Fed-hike bets restore its appeal, while WTI crude at $68.73 has fallen to its lowest level since February as Strait of Hormuz shipping flows normalize. In equities, the Dow Jones at a record 52,900.00 continues to benefit from a “Great Rotation” out of AI-linked tech and into blue-chip industrials, while the US 10-year yield at 4.48% sits in a genuine holding pattern awaiting Wednesday’s clarity. In crypto, Bitcoin at $62,641.86 and XRP at $1.131 have both bounced meaningfully off multi-month lows, though the Crypto Fear & Greed Index’s continued Extreme Fear reading underscores how fragile that recovery remains.
In FX, USD/CAD should continue trading as a range-bound proxy for broad-dollar sentiment this week, with Tuesday’s Ivey PMI a secondary input given no BoC decision is scheduled, while USD/CHF’s pullback from its one-year high looks more like a corrective dip within a broader uptrend than a genuine reversal. In commodities, gold’s bounce is a genuine test of Wednesday’s FOMC minutes, while oil’s decline should continue to reflect physical Hormuz supply normalization absent a breakdown in the delayed Doha peace talks. The Dow Jones’s record-high rotation into blue-chips is the week’s most consequential equity setup — a confirmed continuation trade so long as the soft-landing narrative holds through Monday’s ISM Services print and Wednesday’s Fed minutes. The US 10-year yield remains a genuine two-way trade pending Wednesday’s release. In crypto, Bitcoin’s hold above the $62,000 level it has just cleared and XRP’s defense of $1.10 are this week’s key technical tells, with both assets still vulnerable to a return of Extreme Fear-driven selling if Bitcoin fails to hold that support.
CSFX’s highest-conviction setups for the week are: fading WTI crude on a bounce toward $71.50 (the cleanest structural trade given ongoing Hormuz supply normalization), buying the Dow Jones on a confirmed dip toward 52,000, and buying gold on dips toward $4,050 ahead of Wednesday’s FOMC minutes. USD/CAD is a range trade between 1.4100 and 1.4270 given the lack of a fresh BoC catalyst; USD/CHF is a buy-the-dip toward 0.7980 within its broader bullish structure; the US 10Y yield is a fade of the rise toward 4.55% on expectations of a more dovish-leaning FOMC minutes release; Bitcoin is a $58,000 accumulation play tied to a confirmed hold above the newly-cleared $62,000 support level; and XRP is a $1.00 cautious accumulation play contingent on holding above the critical $1.10 reclaim level. CSFX will issue intra-week alerts if Wednesday’s FOMC minutes deliver a material surprise in either direction, if the Doha peace talks show signs of breaking down, if Monday’s ISM Services PMI or Thursday’s jobless claims data materially shift the Fed-hike narrative, or if Bitcoin ETF flow data shows a sharp reversal. Follow all updates at capitalstreetfx.com.
Trade US Markets at CSFX →