Trump Declares Iran Deal “Over”, Threatens to “Hit Them Hard Tonight”; Dow Sheds 700+ Points as Oil Rockets 7%, Yields Ease on Haven Bid Ahead of Warsh’s First FOMC Minutes | US Session – Technical Analysis | 8 July 2026
Trump Declares Iran Deal “Over” and Threatens to “Hit Them Hard Tonight” as Wall Street Extends Losses, Oil Rockets 7%, Treasury Yields Ease on Haven Bid and Traders Brace for Kevin Warsh’s First FOMC Minutes
Wall Street extends losses as Trump declares the Iran ceasefire MoU “over” and threatens to “hit them hard tonight,” with the Dow down about 700-800 points; oil rockets more than 7% toward $75.40 WTI and $79.60 Brent; the Dollar holds a firm haven bid while Treasury yields actually ease into the session, with the 10-year near 4.55% and the 30-year near 5.05%; Gold sinks over 2.5% toward $4,050; Corn holds a one-month high near on European crop damage; the chip rout drags the Nasdaq 100 lower and the VIX up over 11%; Bitcoin and Dogecoin slide with $300 million in longs liquidated; and traders count down to the FOMC’s June Minutes — the first under new Fed Chair Kevin Warsh — due at 2:00 PM ET, alongside a $39 billion 10-year note auction at 1:00 PM ET.
The dominant story of the US session is the collapse of the fragile US-Iran truce, and American markets are now pricing it in earnest. Speaking from the NATO summit in Ankara, President Trump declared that the ceasefire memorandum of understanding signed three weeks ago “is over,” telling reporters “I don’t want to deal with them anymore. They’re scum” — and later escalated further, threatening a fresh round of strikes and saying “we’re going to hit them hard tonight.” The remarks came hours after US Central Command confirmed strikes on more than 80 Iranian targets in retaliation for Tuesday’s attack on three commercial vessels in the Strait of Hormuz, after the US Treasury revoked the sanctions waiver that had allowed Iran to sell crude on the open market, and after Iranian drone and missile attacks on US-linked bases in Bahrain and Kuwait. As of mid-morning trade, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down close to 790 points, or about 1.5%, near 52,137, with the S&P 500 off roughly 0.6-0.8% and the Nasdaq Composite down about 0.7% near 25,635; the VIX has jumped more than 11% to trade near 18.00, its largest one-day rise in over a month. As is typical of an oil-shock tape, the damage is uneven: Exxon Mobil, Chevron and ConocoPhillips rose close to 2% premarket, Diamondback Energy jumped more than 3%, while airlines and cruise operators — Carnival, Norwegian, United and Delta — dropped between 2% and 4% on the higher fuel-cost outlook.
Layered on top of the geopolitical shock is a still-deepening rotation out of the semiconductor complex. Samsung Electronics slid more than 8% in Seoul despite flagging a staggering 19-fold profit surge, as investors questioned whether memory-chip demand can hold up in the second half, and South Korea’s Kospi crashed 5.35% into a bear market — roughly 20% below its June 19 record — briefly triggering a sell-side sidecar halt. That weakness has washed straight into the US session: the iShares Semiconductor ETF is down around 3%, all of the Magnificent Seven traded lower premarket, and the Nasdaq 100 is underperforming the broader tape. Broadcom pared early losses to trade down about 0.7% after Apple said it plans to spend more than $30 billion under a chip-supply agreement struck with the company earlier this week — one of the few genuinely constructive tech headlines of the day, and one that has helped Apple itself hold roughly flat even after it lost its attempt to overturn the EU’s “gatekeeper” designation under the Digital Markets Act. SpaceX, which joined the Nasdaq-100 this week, has bucked the sell-off in premarket trading.
In commodities, WTI crude has extended its advance to more than 7% since Tuesday’s close, trading near $75.40 and testing its 200-day moving average, while Brent has cleared $79.60 — a two-week high — as the Bahrain and Kuwait strikes and Trump’s Ankara comments load a fresh shipping-risk and supply premium back into the barrel; the revoked Iranian oil waiver, analysts note, has removed a key incentive for Tehran’s compliance. Gold, by contrast, illustrates how unevenly the “safe-haven” narrative is being distributed: the metal has turned sharply south, down roughly 2.6% and trading near $4,050.50, pressured by a firmer Dollar and by a hawkish repricing of the Fed, with September rate-hike odds near 58-63% on CME FedWatch, up from about 56-57% earlier in the week — even as Treasury yields themselves have actually eased slightly this morning. In the grains, Corn holds a fresh one-month high near $4.5987 a bushel after an intense heatwave damaged nearly a third of France’s crop, compounding a supportive backdrop of below-forecast June 1 US stocks (5.295 billion bushels), reduced planted acreage (95.343 million acres) and hot Midwest temperatures, with Friday’s July WASDE and a US-China framework to cut tariffs on American agricultural goods both looming as catalysts.
In rates, the picture has actually reversed from Tuesday’s selloff: Treasuries have caught a modest safe-haven bid this morning, with the 10-year easing about 1 basis point to trade near 4.55% and the 2-year down nearly 2 basis points to 4.18%, while the 30-year has eased marginally to near 5.05%, still just above the psychologically important 5% threshold it broke on Tuesday. That haven demand is, for now, offsetting the oil-driven inflation impulse heading into a $39 billion 10-year note auction at 1:00 PM ET — a tension between geopolitical fear and inflation risk that gives today’s FOMC Minutes added significance in the tighter-lipped Warsh era. The June 16-17 meeting produced a 9-9 split among participants on whether to hike in 2026, a division the new Chair described as “a good family fight,” and the Minutes, due at 18:00 GMT (2:00 PM ET), are the first released since Warsh became the first chair in 14 years to withhold his own dot from the projections. In crypto, Bitcoin briefly topped $64,000 on Tuesday before rolling over and now trades near $62,000, with roughly $300 million liquidated from the market — overwhelmingly longs — open interest down about 2.9%, and Strategy disclosing a rare sale of 3,588 BTC worth some $225 million; Dogecoin, the weakest of the large-cap majors, is down near $0.072 after falling almost 3% on Tuesday. Overnight, the Reserve Bank of New Zealand delivered its first Official Cash Rate hike in three years, lifting the OCR by 25 basis points to 2.50% and flagging further tightening as likely. Attention now turns squarely to the Fed Minutes as the session’s decisive catalyst, with Trump’s threatened overnight strikes on Iran hanging over the close.
US Session Headlines
The stories driving price action across FX, equities, energy, metals, grains, rates and crypto this session
US Session Economic Calendar — 8 July 2026
Key releases and events shaping price action across today’s US session (times GMT unless noted)
| Time | Event | Actual / Detail | Impact | Market Read |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 🇺🇸Ongoing | Trump Declares Iran MoU “Is Over,” Threatens Strikes “Tonight” | Remarks follow US strikes on 80+ Iranian targets and the revoked oil-sale waiver | 🔴 CRITICAL | Drives the session’s risk-off tone, safe-haven Dollar bid and two-week highs in crude |
| 🇺🇸Overnight | Iran Drone- and Missile-Strikes on US-Linked Bases in Bahrain and Kuwait | First direct strikes on Gulf-based US installations since the ceasefire began | 🔴 CRITICAL | Escalates the conflict beyond shipping attacks; keeps oil firmly bid into New York |
| 🇳🇿Overnight | RBNZ Official Cash Rate Decision | +25bps to 2.50%, the first hike in three years; further tightening flagged as likely | 🟢 MEDIUM | Reinforces the global hawkish undertone; Kiwi near the top of the G10 leaderboard |
| 🇺🇸14:30 | EIA Weekly Crude Oil Inventories | Watched closely with WTI at two-week highs and Hormuz transit risk elevated | 🟢 MEDIUM | A large draw would compound the geopolitical premium; a build could cool the spike |
| 🇺🇸17:00 | US Treasury $39 Billion 10-Year Note Auction | Follows Tuesday’s 3-year sale; 10Y trading near 4.56% into the bidding deadline | 🟢 MEDIUM | A tail would extend the long-end selloff and pressure the 30Y further above 5.05% |
| 🇺🇸18:00 | FOMC June 16-17 Meeting Minutes (2:00 PM ET) | First Minutes of the Warsh era; committee split 9-9 on hiking in 2026 | 🔴 CRITICAL | The session’s decisive catalyst for the Dollar, yields and risk assets into the close |
| 🇺🇸Afternoon | Trump-Zelenskyy Meeting at the NATO Summit | Alliance finalising a declaration on collective defence and a €70bn Ukraine pledge | 🟢 MEDIUM | Headline risk for defence names and European FX crosses into the US afternoon |
| 🇺🇸Fri 10 Jul | USDA July WASDE Report (Look-Ahead) | Yield estimates expected held at 183 bpa corn; adjustments to align with June 30 data | 🟢 MEDIUM | The next scheduled catalyst for Corn, which trades at a one-month high near $4.5987 |
US Session Trade Ideas — 8 July 2026
Seven structured setups — USD/CAD, USD/CHF, Gold, Nasdaq 100, US 30Y, Bitcoin, Dogecoin — with updated prices, levels, and full fundamental and technical analysis
USD/CAD
Fundamental Backdrop
USD/CAD trades firm above the 1.42 handle as the safe-haven Dollar holds near its highest level in roughly a week following Trump’s declaration that the Iran ceasefire MoU “is over” and his threat to strike Iran again “tonight.” Notably, the loonie is drawing far less support from the 6% oil spike than the old playbook would suggest: the rolling correlation between the Canadian dollar and WTI has turned negative in recent months, a clear break from the strongly positive relationship of prior oil shocks, leaving the pair driven primarily by the Canada-US two-year yield spread and broad Dollar direction. The Bank of Canada’s latest Business Outlook and Consumer Expectations surveys pointed to elevated inflation expectations and climbing input costs, constraints that leave the BoC little room to ease even as the economy cools, while Canada’s June jobs report surprised with an 88K gain driven by record full-time hiring. The decisive catalyst is the FOMC’s June Minutes at 18:00 GMT (2:00 PM ET), the first of the Warsh era; a hawkish read would cement the Dollar’s momentum.
Technical Outlook
USD/CAD has climbed steadily from its January low near 1.3481 to a July high above 1.4220, and the pair’s push above Tuesday’s 1.4202-1.4222 overnight range keeps the short-term structure constructive above a rising 50-day moving average near 1.43 on some model estimates and, more conservatively, above the 1.4180-1.4200 breakout shelf. Momentum is positive but not stretched, with technical models showing a clear bullish majority (21 of 26 indicators on one aggregate read). Resistance: 1.4260 (this week’s intraday supply) and 1.4300 (this trade’s target, the round-number cap above the July range). Support: 1.4200 (this trade’s buy-dip level, the former range ceiling and psychological handle) and 1.4150 (this trade’s stop, beneath last week’s consolidation). A confirmed close above 1.4300 would open a path toward the 1.4350-1.4400 zone, while a break below 1.4150 would neutralise the near-term bullish bias.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) the FOMC June Minutes at 18:00 GMT, the session’s decisive Dollar catalyst; (2) any further escalation or walk-back of Trump’s threat to strike Iran “tonight”; (3) EIA crude inventories at 14:30 GMT, given the loonie’s (now weaker but not absent) oil linkage; (4) the $39bn 10-year auction at 17:00 GMT and the Canada-US yield-spread response; (5) headline risk around US-Canada trade negotiations, which strategists flag as the key precondition for any durable CAD recovery.
USD/CHF
Fundamental Backdrop
USD/CHF is one of the session’s cleaner expressions of the safe-haven hierarchy: when the shock is US-centric monetary tightening plus an oil-driven inflation scare, the Dollar has been outpacing even the Swiss franc’s own haven bid. The pair has extended its recovery from the June low at 0.7603 — a multi-year trough — and pushed through the 0.8041 swing high as Trump’s Ankara remarks and the Bahrain-Kuwait strikes lift the Greenback across G10. The rally is underpinned by a widening policy gap: the Fed held at 3.50%-3.75% in June with half the committee projecting at least one 2026 hike and September hike odds near 63%, while the SNB’s policy rate remains pinned near zero, keeping the rate differential firmly in the Dollar’s favour. The June Minutes at 18:00 GMT are the make-or-break event; analysts see limited risk of a dovish surprise and expect “a cementing of the hawkish message to firm up dollar momentum,” though after last week’s soft 57K payrolls print markets may hesitate to re-rate hike odds sharply higher.
Technical Outlook
USD/CHF’s rally from 0.7603 has resumed after brief consolidations, and the firm break of the 0.8041 high targets the 100% projection of the advance in the 0.8198 area next — just above this trade’s 0.8160 target. The medium-term picture remains a recovery within a larger downtrend: only a break of the 38.2% retracement of the 0.9200-0.7603 decline at 0.8213 would argue for a genuine bullish reversal, which keeps disciplined dip-buying, rather than breakout-chasing, the preferred approach. Resistance: 0.8120 (minor projection cluster) and 0.8160 (this trade’s target, ahead of the 0.8198-0.8213 confluence). Support: 0.8040 (this trade’s buy-dip level, the former swing high and now first support) and 0.8000 (this trade’s stop, beneath the round handle and the 0.8012 prior consolidation top). A rejection back below 0.7946 would turn the intraday bias neutral and void the setup.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) the FOMC June Minutes at 18:00 GMT — the franc is acutely sensitive to the US real-yield impulse; (2) any overnight US strikes on Iran, which could paradoxically favour CHF over USD if the escalation broadens into a global-growth scare; (3) the 10-year auction at 17:00 GMT; (4) SNB commentary on franc strength, given the pair’s proximity to multi-year lows earlier this summer; (5) month-to-date positioning flows, with the Dollar index near a one-week high at 101.2.
Gold
Fundamental Backdrop
Gold is the session’s clearest illustration that this escalation’s “safe-haven” bid is flowing into the Dollar and oil rather than bullion. The metal has turned south and trades deep in negative territory near $4,050, unwinding the two-week high near $4,180 reached after last week’s soft 57K payrolls print, as the same oil spike that stokes war fears also feeds inflation expectations and lifts the probability of a September Fed hike to roughly 63% on CME FedWatch, from about 57% on Tuesday. Real yields are gold’s primary 2026 headwind, and with the 10-year near 4.56% and the 30-year above 5.05%, the opportunity cost of holding the non-yielding metal keeps rising. The World Gold Council’s valuation framework pegs fair value near $4,100 with a $3,895-$4,305 band, meaning spot has now slipped below the model midpoint; a sustained move under the $4,000 threshold is flagged as a level that could trigger additional selling. Offsetting supports remain real: the PBoC extended its gold buying to a 20th straight month with its largest purchase since 2023, and CFTC data show speculative net longs rising to 194K contracts.
Technical Outlook
On the daily chart, XAU/USD maintains a bearish bias, holding below all major moving averages — the 21-day near $4,140, the 50-day at $4,374, and the 200-day and 100-day far overhead at $4,489 and $4,619 — after falling from January’s record $5,405 to a June low at $3,941-$4,002. The RSI near 44 signals subdued momentum rather than oversold conditions, leaving room for further downside. Resistance: $4,100 (this trade’s sell-rally level, the WGC fair-value pivot and intraday supply) and $4,140-$4,160 (the 21-day average and this trade’s stop zone). Support: $4,000-$4,002 (the psychological floor and June’s low) and $3,950 (this trade’s target, ahead of the $3,941 cycle trough). A hawkish-Minutes break below $4,000 would expose the $3,895 lower band of the WGC range, while a dovish surprise reclaiming $4,160 would void the setup and re-open $4,200.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) the FOMC June Minutes at 18:00 GMT — the single most important input for the real-yield channel; (2) the September hike probability on CME FedWatch after the release; (3) any overnight US strikes on Iran, the one catalyst with clear potential to flip gold’s session direction; (4) the 10-year auction at 17:00 GMT and the long-end yield response; (5) continued central-bank demand headlines, with the PBoC’s 20-month buying streak the structural floor under the market.
Nasdaq 100
Fundamental Backdrop
The Nasdaq 100 is the session’s underperformer among US benchmarks, hit from two directions at once. The first is the Iran shock: Trump’s declaration that the ceasefire MoU “is over,” his threat to “hit them hard tonight,” and the resulting 6% oil spike revive inflation risk at precisely the moment markets are pricing at least one Fed hike by year-end — a toxic mix for long-duration growth valuations. The second is a rotation out of the semiconductor complex that predates today’s headlines and is deepening: Samsung slid more than 8% in Seoul despite a 19-fold profit surge as investors question second-half memory demand, South Korea’s Kospi crashed 5.35% into a bear market, the iShares Semiconductor ETF is down around 3%, and every Magnificent Seven name traded lower premarket (Meta -1.8%, Nvidia -1.6%, Amazon -1.7%). Partial offsets exist — Apple is steadier after unveiling a $30 billion-plus chip-supply agreement with Broadcom, and new index member SpaceX has bucked the sell-off — but with the FOMC Minutes at 2:00 PM ET expected to cement a hawkish message, rallies look like supply until proven otherwise.
Technical Outlook
The Nasdaq 100 has broken below its 29,266 overnight floor after failing repeatedly near 29,550-29,560, leaving a lower-high structure in place on the intraday chart and confirming the short-term momentum shift that aggregate daily signals (a “Strong Sell” on moving-average models) had already flagged. The index remains comfortably above its longer-term uptrend, so this is framed as a tactical fade rather than a trend reversal. Resistance: 29,400 (this trade’s sell-rally level, the broken overnight pivot and Tuesday’s settlement zone) and 29,750 (this trade’s stop, above this week’s supply shelf). Support: 28,800 (the late-June consolidation base) and 28,300 (this trade’s target, the June breakout origin and a natural demand zone). A dovish-Minutes squeeze back above 29,750 voids the setup; a hawkish read plus overnight strikes on Iran would put the 28,000 round number in play.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) the FOMC June Minutes at 18:00 GMT (2:00 PM ET), the decisive rates catalyst for growth valuations; (2) semiconductor tape action around the SOX ETF’s 3% decline and any further Asia contagion into Thursday’s session; (3) headline risk from Trump’s threatened overnight strikes on Iran; (4) the 10-year auction at 17:00 GMT — a tail that pushes yields higher is a direct Nasdaq negative; (5) Apple-Broadcom follow-through and the EU gatekeeper ruling’s read-across for Alphabet, Meta and Microsoft.
US 30Y (Treasury Bond Yield)
Fundamental Backdrop
The long end of the US curve is bearing the brunt of today’s twin shocks. Treasuries extended their late-Tuesday selloff after Trump declared the Iran MoU “over,” with yields up 2-3 basis points across the curve — the 10-year near 4.56% and the 30-year pushing above 5.05%, extending Tuesday’s close at 5.027% — as the 6% oil surge feeds directly into inflation expectations at a moment when markets already price at least one Fed hike by end-2026. Supply compounds the pressure: the market must absorb a $39 billion 10-year note auction this afternoon, following Tuesday’s 3-year sale and ahead of a 30-year auction later in the refunding cycle, with heavy issuance a persistent structural weight on the long end. The May episode remains the reference point — the 30-year touched 5.197%, its highest since 2007, on the same combination of war-driven inflation fear and fiscal worry, and a BofA survey found 62% of managers expecting an eventual move to 6%. The June Minutes at 18:00 GMT, the first of the tighter-lipped Warsh era, are the session’s decisive catalyst for whether the hawkish repricing extends.
Technical Outlook
The 30-year yield’s structure is a rising channel from the June pullback low near 4.85%, with the break back above the psychologically important 5.00% threshold on Tuesday confirming the bearish-for-bonds impulse; BMO’s rates desk has flagged 5.25% as the level where a “more durable pullback” in equity valuations would likely follow, bracketing this trade’s target. Momentum favours higher yields but the move is not yet stretched relative to May’s extremes. Resistance (in yield): 5.10% (this week’s projection zone) and 5.20% (this trade’s target, just below the May cycle high at 5.197%). Support (in yield): 5.00% (this trade’s buy-dip level, the reclaimed threshold) and 4.94% (this trade’s stop, beneath last week’s consolidation). A strong, tail-free 10-year auction plus dovish-leaning Minutes would risk a squeeze back below 4.94%; a tailed auction into hawkish Minutes opens a fast path to 5.15-5.20%.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) the $39bn 10-year auction at 17:00 GMT — recent sales have tailed, and another price miss would hit the long end hardest; (2) the FOMC June Minutes at 18:00 GMT and the market’s read on the 9-9 hike split; (3) oil’s trajectory into the EIA inventory data at 14:30 GMT, the session’s inflation-expectations input; (4) any overnight strikes on Iran, which cut both ways — inflationary via oil, but a flight-to-quality bond bid if the escalation broadens; (5) global long-end contagion, with German and Japanese 30-year yields also climbing.
Bitcoin
Fundamental Backdrop
Bitcoin continues to trade like a risk asset rather than a haven in this cycle: after briefly topping $64,000 on Tuesday afternoon, BTC surrendered its gains and has slipped toward $62,000 as the US strikes on Iran, the revoked oil waiver and Trump’s “hit them hard tonight” threat sour broader risk appetite. Roughly $300 million was liquidated from the crypto market over the past 24 hours, predominantly bullish longs, open interest fell about 2.9%, and the Fear & Greed Index sits in “Extreme Fear.” Adding an idiosyncratic weight, Strategy disclosed a rare sale of 3,588 BTC worth about $225 million — reportedly to restore preferred stock to par and restart future acquisitions, but a symbolic break in the market’s most famous accumulation program nonetheless. Against that, the contrarian case is building: CryptoQuant notes supply-in-loss above 10 million coins and long-term holders selling at a loss, a depth of on-chain pain “rarely observed” that it flags as a potential medium- to long-term dollar-cost-averaging opportunity, while Binance derivatives traders, both retail and whales, have been adding long exposure into the dip.
Technical Outlook
BTC’s intraday structure is a sequence of lower highs beneath the $64,000 rejection, with the market now probing the lower half of its recent $61,000-$64,000 range. The bigger-picture map is well defined: analysts flag a decisive reclaim of $61,000-$62,000 as strengthening the bullish-divergence thesis, with $65,000-$66,000 — the old range support turned resistance — as the next target zone, while the late-June capitulation low near $59,000 anchors the downside. Resistance: $64,000 (Tuesday’s rejection high) and $66,000 (this trade’s target, the upper boundary of the recovery zone). Support: $60,000 (this trade’s buy-dip level, the round-number and late-June demand shelf) and $58,000 (this trade’s stop, beneath the capitulation lows). Sustained trade below $58,000 would signal the range has broken down and expose the mid-$50,000s; a reclaim of $64,000 before the dip fills would justify chasing only on a confirmed 4-hour close.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) the FOMC June Minutes at 18:00 GMT — crypto has been trading the real-yield impulse almost as tightly as gold; (2) overnight Iran headlines, which drove the weekend’s flush toward $59,000 and could do so again; (3) spot ETF flow data, where a second day of inflows earlier this week hinted at recovering institutional demand; (4) follow-through from Strategy’s sale and any further corporate-treasury dispositions; (5) liquidation clusters around $60,000 and $58,000 on aggregated exchange data.
Dogecoin
Fundamental Backdrop
Dogecoin is behaving exactly as a high-beta memecoin should in a risk-off tape: DOGE fell almost 3% on Tuesday to $0.0742, the worst performer among large-cap majors, and has extended lower toward $0.072 as the Iran escalation, the firmer Dollar and roughly $300 million in market-wide long liquidations pressure the whole complex. With no yield and no haven narrative, DOGE trades as a pure expression of speculative appetite, which is currently pinned by “Extreme Fear” sentiment. That said, the asset-specific news flow has quietly improved: Dogecoin Core 1.14.8 shipped with security fixes the network had long needed, and House of Doge completed its merger to begin trading on Nasdaq — a small but genuine step in the token’s institutional normalisation. The setup mirrors the broader market’s: deeply washed-out positioning that argues for disciplined dip-buying at pre-defined levels rather than a fresh breakdown thesis, with the FOMC Minutes at 18:00 GMT the catalyst that will decide whether risk appetite stabilises into the close.
Technical Outlook
DOGE’s decline from the June recovery high has now retraced into the $0.070-$0.073 demand zone that produced the late-June bounce from $0.0728, leaving the market compressed between well-defined boundaries. Momentum is negative but decelerating, consistent with a flush that is closer to its end than its beginning — provided the $0.070 round-number shelf holds. Resistance: $0.0745 (Tuesday’s breakdown level, now the first supply) and $0.0800 (this trade’s target, the top of the June recovery range). Support: $0.0700 (this trade’s buy-dip level, the psychological floor and demand shelf) and $0.0660 (this trade’s stop, beneath the cycle lows). A daily close below $0.0660 would confirm a broader breakdown and void the accumulation thesis; a reclaim of $0.0745 alongside a post-Minutes risk bounce would open the path back to $0.078-$0.080.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) Bitcoin’s behaviour at the $60,000-$62,000 shelf — DOGE will not bottom independently of BTC; (2) the FOMC June Minutes at 18:00 GMT and the immediate risk-asset response; (3) overnight Iran escalation headlines; (4) any social-media or Musk-adjacent catalysts, which remain the token’s dominant idiosyncratic driver; (5) follow-through on the House of Doge Nasdaq listing and Core 1.14.8 adoption.
US Session FAQ — 8 July 2026
Answers to the questions traders are asking this session
US Session Summary — Wednesday, 8 July 2026 (Updated Mid-Session, 11:10 AM ET)
Wednesday’s US session is extending a fresh bout of geopolitical escalation as President Trump, speaking from the NATO summit in Ankara, declares that the US-Iran ceasefire memorandum of understanding signed three weeks ago “is over” and later threatens to “hit them hard tonight” — hours after US Central Command confirmed strikes on more than 80 Iranian targets, Washington revoked Iran’s oil-sale waiver, and Iranian drones and missiles struck US-linked bases in Bahrain and Kuwait. As of mid-morning trade the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down close to 790 points, or about 1.5%, near 52,137, the S&P 500 was off roughly 0.6-0.8%, and the Nasdaq underperformed near 25,635 as a deepening semiconductor rout — Samsung down over 8% despite a 19-fold profit surge, the Kospi in a bear market, the SOX ETF off around 3% — compounded the risk-off tone; the VIX has jumped more than 11% to near 18.00. WTI crude has extended its advance to more than 7%, trading near $75.40 and testing its 200-day moving average, with Brent above $79.60, lifting energy majors while airlines and cruise lines slid. The safe-haven Dollar holds a firm bid, with USD/CAD firm above 1.42 and USD/CHF extending through its 0.8041 swing high. Notably, Treasury yields have not followed oil higher this morning: the 10-year has eased about 1 basis point to near 4.55% and the 30-year has slipped marginally to near 5.05% ahead of this afternoon’s $39 billion 10-year auction, as haven demand for bonds briefly offsets the oil-driven inflation impulse — even as that same Dollar and oil move has sent Gold sharply lower, down roughly 2.6% and trading near $4,050.50, despite the war headlines. Corn holds a one-month high near $4.5987 on French heat damage, tight US stocks and pre-WASDE positioning. In crypto, Bitcoin has slipped toward $62,000 with roughly $300 million in longs liquidated and Strategy disclosing a rare 3,588-BTC sale, while Dogecoin, the weakest large-cap major, trades near $0.072. Overnight, the RBNZ delivered its first hike in three years, lifting the OCR to 2.50%. Highest-conviction macro: buy US 30Y yield dips toward 5.00%, stop 4.94%, target 5.20% — the oil-driven inflation impulse, heavy auction supply and a Fed committee split 9-9 on hiking form a genuine, mutually reinforcing case for higher long-end yields, even though this morning’s haven-driven dip in yields, a tail-free auction, or a dovish-leaning Minutes release all carry real squeeze risk into the trade.
For the individual instruments: USD/CAD buy dips toward 1.4200, stop 1.4150, target 1.4300 — the safe-haven Dollar bid is genuine and the loonie’s broken oil correlation removes its traditional offset, though Canada’s record full-time hiring and any US-Canada trade breakthrough are real headwinds to a deeper advance. USD/CHF buy dips toward 0.8040, stop 0.8000, target 0.8160 — the break of the 0.8041 swing high and the widening Fed-SNB policy gap are genuine tailwinds, though the pair remains a recovery within a larger downtrend below 0.8213, arguing for disciplined entries. Gold sell rallies toward $4,100, stop $4,160, target $3,950 — rising real yields and hawkish Fed repricing are genuine headwinds for the non-yielding metal, though 20 straight months of PBoC buying and the risk of overnight strikes on Iran are real forces that could flip the tape. Nasdaq 100 sell rallies toward 29,400, stop 29,750, target 28,300 — the twin pressure of hawkish rates repricing and the semiconductor valuation reassessment is genuine, though Apple’s Broadcom agreement and deeply washed-out intraday sentiment could fuel sharp squeezes. US 30Y buy dips (in yield) toward 5.00%, stop 4.94%, target 5.20% — inflation risk and issuance are genuine tailwinds for yields, though a strong auction or a flight-to-quality bid on overnight escalation are real two-way risks. Bitcoin buy dips toward $60,000, stop $58,000, target $66,000 — rarely-observed on-chain capitulation and whale dip-buying are genuine accumulation signals, though “Extreme Fear” sentiment and Strategy’s symbolic sale mean the bottom must prove itself at support first. Dogecoin buy dips toward $0.0700, stop $0.0660, target $0.0800 — washed-out positioning and quiet institutional normalisation via the House of Doge listing are genuine tailwinds, though the token’s high beta to Bitcoin means the setup lives or dies with the $60,000 BTC shelf. The decisive variables for the remainder of the session are the FOMC’s June Meeting Minutes at 18:00 GMT (2:00 PM ET) — the first of the Warsh era — the $39 billion 10-year auction at 17:00 GMT, and whether Trump’s threatened overnight strikes on Iran materialise, all of which carry the potential to reshape the broader risk, currency and commodity narrative into the close and the Asian open. Size positions accordingly, and note that the Iran situation in particular remains fluid and carries genuine event risk that could reshape sentiment intraday.
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