Wall Street Rebounds as Chipmakers Roar Back, Gold Holds Near $4,140 After Weak Jobs Data, Bitcoin Extends Its Slump While XRP Tests $1.18 Resistance | Technical Analysis – US Session | 6 July 2026
Wall Street Rebounds as Chipmakers Roar Back and SK Hynix Prices a $28 Billion Nasdaq Listing, While Gold Holds Near $4,140, the 20-Year Yield Sits Near 4.99%, and Bitcoin Extends Its Slump as XRP Tests $1.18 Resistance.
Wall Street reopens after the Independence Day break with chipmakers roaring back and SK Hynix pricing a $28 billion Nasdaq listing, the Dollar firms against the Canadian Dollar and Swiss Franc even as post-payrolls rate-hike odds ease toward 50%, Gold and Corn hold recent highs, the 20-Year Treasury yield sits near 4.99%, and Bitcoin extends its slump into Extreme Fear territory while XRP tests key resistance — all with the NATO summit and FOMC minutes shaping the week ahead.
Friday’s US jobs report continues to anchor sentiment as trading resumes Monday. June non-farm payrolls rose by just 57,000 against a 115,000 consensus, the smallest gain in four months, while the unemployment rate unexpectedly eased to 4.2% as the labour-force participation rate fell to its lowest level since March 2021. Markets have read the combination as a labour-market cooling that keeps the Federal Reserve on hold rather than signalling a genuine downturn, and Fed funds futures now imply roughly a 45–50% probability of a rate hike by September, down sharply from 65–67% before the report. Fed Chair Kevin Warsh’s remarks at last week’s ECB Sintra Forum that inflation expectations are moderating, while reaffirming that “prices are too high” and the central bank’s commitment to price stability, have kept a still-live hike risk on the table even as the softer jobs data caps near-term conviction.
In equities, the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite is leading Monday’s advance, up roughly 0.8%, as chipmakers rebound from last week’s sharp AI-valuation-driven slump that saw Micron, AMD and Intel tumble between 4% and 5.5% apiece on Thursday. The VanEck Semiconductor ETF (SMH) jumped about 2.7% at the open after Nvidia supplier Hon Hai, also known as Foxconn, reported stronger-than-expected quarterly sales over the weekend, a sign of sustained AI infrastructure demand. Adding to the tape, South Korean memory-chip maker SK Hynix is pricing a Nasdaq depositary-receipt listing of roughly 17.79 million shares seeking to raise about $28 billion, one of the largest AI-era share offerings, while Tesla shares are firmer after the company said its robotaxi service became available in Miami, its latest expansion of autonomous ride-hailing. The S&P 500 is adding roughly 0.5% near 7,524, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average is up a more modest 0.2%, both building on last week’s record-setting, holiday-shortened run that saw the Dow briefly top 52,900 for the first time.
In FX, the Dollar is firmer against both the Canadian Dollar and Swiss Franc even as the softer payrolls print caps its broader advance elsewhere. USD/CAD is trading near 1.4226, not far from the year’s high of 1.4250, as a still-hawkish Fed residual outweighs a Bank of Canada that has held its policy rate steady at 2.25% and flagged risks on both sides of its mandate. USD/CHF is holding near 0.8067, extending its bounce off a two-month low, as the Swiss Franc’s earlier safe-haven bid from the Middle East conflict continues to fade with the Swiss National Bank still on hold at 0%. In commodities, Gold is holding above $4,100 an ounce after easing from Friday’s near two-week high above $4,190, as reduced Fed hike odds continue to provide a broader tailwind even as lower oil prices ease some of the inflation urgency that had supported the metal. Corn futures are holding a one-month high near $4.35 a bushel after the USDA’s quarterly stocks and acreage reports came in tighter than expected, even as hot Midwest weather continues to raise crop-stress concerns. In rates, the 20-year Treasury yield is holding near 4.99%, close to its recent cycle highs, with the 10-year around 4.48%, as markets weigh a still-live September hike risk against Friday’s softer labour data. In crypto, Bitcoin is extending its slump to trade near $62,013.60 with the Fear & Greed Index reading 24, Extreme Fear, even as on-chain data shows whales accumulating more than 270,000 BTC over the past two weeks, while XRP is testing the closely watched $1.18–$1.20 resistance shelf as the CLARITY Act’s Senate floor vote slips to late July or early August.
US Session Headlines
The stories driving price action across equities, FX, rates, metals, grains and crypto this session
US Session Economic Calendar — 6 July 2026
Key releases and events shaping price action across today’s US session
| Time (ET) | Event | Actual / Detail | Impact | Market Read |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 🇺🇸Ongoing | Chipmakers Rebound, SMH +2.7% at the Open | Foxconn’s stronger-than-expected sales report revives AI capex confidence | 🔴 CRITICAL | Leads a broad Nasdaq rally after last week’s chip-stock slump |
| 🇰🇷Ongoing | SK Hynix Prices ~$28bn Nasdaq Depositary-Receipt Listing | ~17.79 million ADR shares, one of the largest AI-era share offerings | 🔴 CRITICAL | Reinforces AI-infrastructure investor demand despite memory-stock volatility |
| 🇺🇸9:45 AM | ISM Services PMI (June) | Markets watching for confirmation of a still-resilient services sector | 🔴 CRITICAL | A soft print would reinforce reduced September hike odds; a hot print revives them |
| 🇺🇸Carryover | Weak June US Non-Farm Payrolls (Fri, market closed) | +57,000 vs. +115,000 consensus; unemployment rate eased to 4.2% | 🔴 CRITICAL | Continues to weigh on Fed hike odds, now near 45–50% for September |
| 🇺🇸Ongoing | Tesla Robotaxi Service Launches in Miami | Latest market for Tesla’s autonomous ride-hailing expansion | 🟢 MED | Supports Tesla shares and the broader autonomy narrative |
| 🇺🇸Ongoing | USDA Quarterly Stocks and Acreage Reports (Prior Week) | June 1 corn stocks and 2026 acreage both below trade expectations | 🟢 MED | Keeps Corn futures pinned near a one-month high |
| 🇹🇷7–8 Jul | NATO Summit, Turkey | Allied defence-spending commitments in focus amid the Ukraine war | 🟢 MED | Watch for defence-sector equity flows and any Dollar safe-haven bid |
| 🇺🇸8 Jul, 2:00 PM | FOMC Meeting Minutes | Markets parsing for the balance of hike-vs-hold sentiment among officials | 🟢 MED | Could reprice September hike odds in either direction |
US Session Trade Ideas — 6 July 2026
Eight structured setups — USD/CAD, USD/CHF, Gold, Corn, S&P 500, US 20Y, BTC/USD, XRP — with updated prices, levels, and full fundamental and technical analysis
USD/CAD
Fundamental Backdrop
USD/CAD is holding near 1.4226, close to the year’s high of 1.4250 set in late June, as the still-hawkish residual from the Fed’s June meeting continues to support the Dollar side of the pair even after Friday’s soft payrolls print. The Bank of Canada has kept its policy rate unchanged at 2.25%, flagging risks on both sides of its inflation and employment mandate amid an uncertain global backdrop, which leaves the pair driven primarily by relative rate expectations rather than any fresh Canadian catalyst. Canadian core inflation has stayed close to the BoC’s 2% target even through the energy-price volatility tied to the Middle East conflict, reducing the case for near-term Canadian tightening and keeping the currency on the defensive against a Dollar still pricing meaningful hike odds.
Technical Outlook
USD/CAD remains in an uptrend that has carried the pair from a January low near 1.3486 to a late-June high of 1.4250, with Monday’s price action consolidating just below that peak. Resistance: 1.4235 (this month’s swing high) and 1.4350 (this trade’s target, a round-number extension). Support: 1.4158 (today’s session low) and 1.4080 (this trade’s stop, near the base of the recent breakout). A confirmed close above 1.4250 would open a run toward 1.44–1.45, while a break below 1.4080 would suggest the rate-differential trade is losing momentum.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) today’s US ISM Services PMI for fresh confirmation of labour-market cooling; (2) Wednesday’s FOMC minutes for the balance of hike-vs-hold sentiment; (3) any Canadian data surprises given the BoC’s data-dependent stance; (4) oil price direction given the Loonie’s petro-currency sensitivity; (5) thin summer liquidity potentially amplifying intraday swings.
USD/CHF
Fundamental Backdrop
USD/CHF is holding near 0.8067, extending its recovery from a two-month low of 0.8022, as the Swiss Franc’s earlier safe-haven bid tied to the Middle East conflict continues to unwind alongside falling oil prices and progress in US-Iran talks. The Swiss National Bank has kept its policy rate at 0% for a fourth consecutive meeting, describing the stance as consistent with price stability and growth even as it revised its inflation outlook modestly higher and reiterated its willingness to intervene in FX markets if needed. With Swiss growth forecasts trimmed to around 1.1% for 2026 on weak external demand, the currency has limited fundamental support to resist a Dollar that is still pricing a meaningful, if reduced, chance of a September Fed hike.
Technical Outlook
USD/CHF remains in a broader uptrend from its 2026 low, with the pair consolidating a two-week range between 0.8022 and roughly 0.8080. Resistance: 0.8080 (this range’s ceiling) and 0.8130 (this trade’s target, near the 52-week midpoint). Support: 0.8020 (the range floor and recent two-month low) and 0.7970 (this trade’s stop, below the broader trend line). A confirmed break above 0.8080 would open a path toward the 0.8173 52-week high, while a close below 0.7970 would suggest the Franc’s haven bid is reasserting itself.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) today’s ISM Services PMI and its implications for Fed hike odds; (2) any fresh SNB commentary on FX intervention; (3) oil price direction given the Franc’s inverse sensitivity to Middle East risk premia; (4) Wednesday’s FOMC minutes; (5) broader Dollar direction as the post-payrolls narrative develops through the week.
Gold
Fundamental Backdrop
Gold is holding above $4,100 an ounce on Monday, easing back from Friday’s near two-week high above $4,190 as recovering energy flows through the Strait of Hormuz and the prospect of increased OPEC+ supply have pushed Brent crude toward $72 a barrel, easing some of the inflationary pressure that had supported the metal. Even so, Friday’s weak June payrolls print, just 57,000 jobs against a 115,000 consensus, continues to underpin bullion by pulling September Fed hike odds down to roughly 45–50% from 65–67% before the report, since lower rates reduce the opportunity cost of holding a non-yielding asset. Central-bank demand remains a supportive structural backdrop, with the World Gold Council reporting a net 41-tonne increase in official reserves in May, led by Poland and China.
Technical Outlook
Gold remains in a broad consolidation between $4,100 and roughly $4,215 that has held for the past two weeks, with Monday’s pullback testing the lower half of that range after Friday’s push toward $4,190–$4,200. Resistance: $4,200 (this range’s recent high) and $4,250 (this trade’s target, a round-number extension). Support: $4,100 (the range floor and this trade’s buy-dip level) and $4,020 (this trade’s stop, below the 20-day moving average). A confirmed close below $4,020 would open a deeper move toward $3,900, while a clean break above $4,250 would target a retest of the intra-year floor near $4,170 from the topside.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) today’s ISM Services PMI and its read-through to Fed hike odds; (2) Wednesday’s FOMC minutes; (3) oil price direction as Strait of Hormuz shipping continues to normalize; (4) any fresh central-bank reserve data; (5) thin midsummer liquidity potentially amplifying intraday swings.
Corn
Fundamental Backdrop
December corn is holding near $4.35 a bushel, its best level since early June, after the USDA’s quarterly stocks and acreage reports came in tighter than trade expectations: June 1 corn stocks were estimated at 5.295 billion bushels, below analysts’ forecasts, while planted acreage was pegged at 95.343 million acres, above trade forecasts but still down from 2025 and the fourth-largest since 1944. Compounding the supply-side tightness, hotter-than-normal temperatures forecast from the Plains to the Atlantic Coast are raising crop-stress concerns across the Corn Belt, even as export demand stays firm, with 2026/27 accumulated sales running 35.6% above a year ago and Mexico the largest buyer.
Technical Outlook
Corn has rallied from an eight-month-low area near $4.10 to its current one-month high near $4.35, now testing the level that capped the market in early June, with the move driven by the twin catalysts of the USDA reports and hot weather. Resistance: $4.35 (today’s session high and the early-June ceiling) and $4.55 (this trade’s target, near the next resistance band). Support: $4.25 (a near-term pivot from last week’s consolidation) and $4.15 (this trade’s stop, below the recent breakout base). A confirmed close above $4.35 would open a path toward $4.55–$4.60, while a break back below $4.15 would suggest the tighter-supply narrative is losing its grip.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) the NOAA 8-to-14-day outlook for confirmation of easing or persisting heat into mid-July; (2) weekly USDA export sales data; (3) ethanol-demand pace relative to the USDA’s full-year target; (4) Brazil’s second-crop corn estimates from StoneX and other private forecasters; (5) any follow-through commentary on the August certified-acreage report that farmers are awaiting.
S&P 500
Fundamental Backdrop
The S&P 500 is adding roughly 0.5% near 7,524 as trading resumes after Friday’s Independence Day closure, extending a rally now anchored by a rebound in chipmakers rather than the AI-valuation anxiety that dragged the index lower last Thursday. Nvidia supplier Foxconn’s stronger-than-expected quarterly sales report, released over the weekend, has revived confidence that AI infrastructure demand remains intact, lifting the VanEck Semiconductor ETF roughly 2.7% at the open. Friday’s soft June payrolls report, just 57,000 jobs against a 115,000 consensus, continues to support risk assets by pulling September Fed hike odds down to roughly 45–50%, even as Fed Chair Kevin Warsh’s residual hawkish commentary keeps a full reversal of hike risk off the table.
Technical Outlook
The S&P 500 remains in a well-defined uptrend that carried the index to a series of fresh highs through the first half of 2026, a run that has continued despite last Thursday’s chip-driven pullback of roughly 0.4%. Resistance: 7,580 (recent record territory) and 7,650 (this trade’s target, an extension into new highs). Support: 7,460 (a near-term pivot from last week’s consolidation) and 7,380 (this trade’s stop, below the 20-day moving average). A confirmed close above 7,580 would open a path toward fresh all-time highs, while a break below 7,380 would suggest the AI-valuation anxiety from last Thursday is reasserting itself.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) today’s ISM Services PMI; (2) further chipmaker and AI-capex headlines following the Foxconn report; (3) SK Hynix’s Nasdaq debut and broader memory-stock sentiment; (4) Wednesday’s FOMC minutes; (5) SpaceX’s addition to the Nasdaq-100 and Samsung’s preliminary Q2 earnings, both due Tuesday.
US 20Y (Treasury Yield)
Fundamental Backdrop
The 20-year Treasury yield is holding near 4.99%, close to its recent cycle highs, as the market continues to weigh a still-live September hike risk against Friday’s softer labour data. The 10-year note yield sits around 4.48%, having held its recent gains after Fed Chair Kevin Warsh reiterated the central bank’s commitment to price stability while acknowledging inflation expectations have moderated somewhat. Long-dated yields have stayed comparatively elevated versus the belly of the curve because the June rate hike itself was framed specifically around energy-driven inflation risk tied to the Middle East conflict, a risk that markets are now pricing out only gradually even as Strait of Hormuz shipping normalizes and oil prices retreat toward pre-conflict levels.
Technical Outlook
The 20-year yield has traded in a roughly 4.85%–5.05% band over the past month, with Monday’s level sitting in the upper half of that range. Resistance: 5.05% (this range’s recent ceiling) and 5.16% (this trade’s stop, a level tested only briefly in late June). Support: 4.99% (today’s session level) and 4.85% (this trade’s target, near the range floor and June’s low). A confirmed move above 5.16% would suggest hike-risk repricing is accelerating, while a decisive break below 4.85% would support the case that the post-payrolls disinflation narrative is dominating the long end.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) today’s ISM Services PMI for a fresh read on economic momentum; (2) Wednesday’s FOMC minutes for the balance of hawkish-versus-dovish sentiment; (3) Thursday’s weekly jobless claims; (4) oil price direction and its pass-through to inflation expectations; (5) any Treasury issuance headlines given the elevated long end of the curve.
BTC/USD
Fundamental Backdrop
Bitcoin is trading near $62,013.60, extending a multi-month slide that has taken the token roughly 20% below its June open and deep into a bear-market structure after closing June down about 20% overall. The Fear & Greed Index reads 24, Extreme Fear, reflecting sustained selling pressure from US spot BTC ETFs that has weighed on the market through the second quarter. Against that bearish backdrop, on-chain data from CryptoQuant shows whales have accumulated more than 270,000 BTC over the past two weeks, a genuine counterweight suggesting large holders view current levels as attractive even as retail sentiment remains deeply negative; JPMorgan has also flagged Michael Saylor’s Strategy as introducing new structural risk into the market as its summer slump deepens.
Technical Outlook
Bitcoin’s daily trend remains structurally bearish, with price sitting barely above its 20-day EMA near $62,459 but comfortably below both the 50-day EMA near $65,738 and the 200-day EMA near $76,019. Resistance: $63,581 (the daily R1 pivot) and $67,000 (this trade’s target, near the 50-day EMA). Support: $62,565 (the daily S1 pivot) and $58,359 (the Bollinger lower band, a level that would come back into play if support fails, and this trade’s stop is set just below it at $56,500 for a margin of safety). A daily close below $58,359 would risk a slide toward the $50,000 area that some strategists have flagged as the next real test, while a close back above $65,738 would support the case that a durable bottom is forming.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) daily US spot BTC ETF flow data for signs the selling wave is abating; (2) any MACD bullish crossover on the daily chart, currently sitting below its signal line; (3) German savings-bank crypto-trading rollout headlines as a potential slow-burn institutional bid; (4) broader risk sentiment given the equity market’s chip-stock rebound; (5) any fresh Strategy-related structural-risk commentary from JPMorgan or other banks.
XRP/USD
Fundamental Backdrop
XRP is trading near $1.14, up over the past week after opening July near $1.04 following a roughly 20% decline in June that tracked Bitcoin’s broader slide below $59,000. Spot XRP ETFs have pulled in about $1.48 billion in net inflows since launch, though they saw their first net weekly outflow as the second quarter closed, a signal that institutional conviction has cooled slightly even as the token outperforms the broader crypto market over the past seven days. The one genuine near-term catalyst is the CLARITY Act, which would permanently classify XRP as a commodity under US law; the White House had targeted a July 4 signing, but with the Senate not returning from recess until 13 July and a defence bill first in line, the floor vote now looks likely to slip to late July or the first week of August.
Technical Outlook
XRP has been range-bound for most of the year between roughly $1.16 and $1.55, and the token’s recent slide to test the $1.00 floor represents a break toward the lower end of that broader structure, with an air pocket down to about $0.80 below the $1.00 level. Resistance: $1.18 (the near-term level XRP must reclaim) and $1.20 (this trade’s key breakout confirmation, above which the year-long downtrend would be broken). Support: $1.10 (this trade’s buy-dip level) and $1.02 (this trade’s stop, just above the closely watched $1.00 floor). A confirmed close above $1.20 would open a path toward $1.28 and beyond, while a break below $1.00 would risk a slide toward the $0.80 air pocket.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) any surprise acceleration in the CLARITY Act’s Senate timeline; (2) weekly spot XRP ETF flow data for confirmation of whether the Q2 outflow was a one-off; (3) Ripple’s IPO speculation and any concrete developments; (4) broader Bitcoin direction given XRP’s high correlation to overall crypto risk sentiment; (5) Mastercard’s Ripple settlement-partner deal for its AI-payments network and any follow-through adoption headlines.
US Session FAQ
Answers to the questions traders are asking about today’s session
US Session Summary — Monday, 6 July 2026
Monday’s US session sees Wall Street reopen after Friday’s Independence Day closure with chipmakers rebounding sharply from last week’s AI-valuation-driven slump, led by a roughly 2.7% jump in the VanEck Semiconductor ETF after Nvidia supplier Foxconn reported stronger-than-expected quarterly sales. The Nasdaq Composite is leading the advance near 0.8%, the S&P 500 is up about 0.5% near 7,524, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average adds a more modest 0.2%, all building on last week’s record-setting, holiday-shortened run. South Korean memory-chip maker SK Hynix is pricing a roughly $28 billion Nasdaq depositary-receipt listing, one of the largest AI-era share offerings, while Tesla shares are firmer after its robotaxi service launched in Miami. Friday’s soft June payrolls report, just 57,000 jobs against a 115,000 consensus, continues to anchor the macro backdrop, pulling September Fed hike odds down to roughly 45–50% from 65–67% before the release, even as Fed Chair Kevin Warsh’s residual hawkish commentary that “prices are too high” keeps a live hike risk on the table. In FX, the Dollar is firmer against both the Canadian Dollar and Swiss Franc, with USD/CAD near 1.4226 and USD/CHF near 0.8067, as rate-differential trades continue to favour the Greenback over central banks that have chosen to hold steady. In commodities, Gold is holding above $4,100 after easing from Friday’s near-$4,190 high, while Corn futures sit at a one-month high near $4.35 a bushel following the USDA’s tighter stockpile and acreage report. The 20-year Treasury yield is holding near 4.99%, close to recent cycle highs. In crypto, Bitcoin is extending its slump to trade near $62,013.60 with the Fear & Greed Index reading Extreme Fear, even as whale accumulation offers a counterweight, while XRP holds near $1.14 as it tests the $1.18–$1.20 resistance shelf with the CLARITY Act’s Senate vote now slipping to late July or early August. Highest-conviction macro: buy the S&P 500 on dips toward 7,460, stop 7,380, target 7,650 — today’s chipmaker rebound provides a genuine, fundamentals-based catalyst on top of reduced Fed hike odds, making this a high-conviction setup, though a sizable stop is still warranted given two-sided event risk from Wednesday’s FOMC minutes and the NATO summit this week.
For the individual instruments: USD/CAD buy dips toward 1.4150, stop 1.4080, target 1.4350 — a hawkish Fed residual outweighing a steady Bank of Canada is the dominant near-term driver, though thin summer liquidity argues for a disciplined stop. USD/CHF buy dips toward 0.8020, stop 0.7970, target 0.8130 — the Franc’s fading safe-haven bid is genuinely supportive, though any fresh Middle East escalation is a real wildcard that could reverse the move quickly. Gold buy dips toward $4,100, stop $4,020, target $4,250 — reduced Fed hike odds provide a clear tailwind, though falling oil prices and easing inflation urgency argue for a measured position size. Corn buy dips toward $4.25, stop $4.15, target $4.55 — the tighter USDA stockpile data is a genuine standalone catalyst, though the weather-driven portion of the rally could unwind if the current heat breaks. S&P 500 buy dips toward 7,460, stop 7,380, target 7,650 — today’s chip-stock rebound is a fundamentals-based catalyst, though the index’s proximity to record highs warrants a disciplined stop against any give-back. US 20Y sell yield rallies toward 5.08%, stop 5.16%, target 4.85% — reduced hike odds should continue to cap the long end, though a still-live September hike risk is a genuine offsetting consideration. BTC/USD buy dips toward $59,500, stop $56,500, target $67,000 — whale accumulation is a genuine counterweight to the bearish trend, though the Extreme Fear reading argues for disciplined sizing until a confirmed reversal signal emerges. XRP/USD buy dips toward $1.10, stop $1.02, target $1.28 — a reclaim of the $1.18–$1.20 shelf would break the year-long downtrend, though the CLARITY Act’s delay to late July removes a near-term catalyst. The decisive variables for the remainder of the session are whether today’s ISM Services PMI reinforces or challenges the reduced September hike narrative, and whether the chipmaker rebound broadens into further AI-capex confirmation from this week’s SpaceX Nasdaq-100 addition and Samsung’s preliminary earnings. Size positions accordingly, and note that Wednesday’s FOMC minutes and this week’s NATO summit both carry genuine event risk that could reshape sentiment through the coming days.
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