Oil Pares Gains to $83 After Topping $86 as Hormuz Blockade Nears; CPI Cools to 3.5% Ahead of Warsh’s Debut Testimony; Dow, Gold, Bitcoin All Firm | U.S. Session – Technical Analysis | 14 July 2026
Oil Pares Gains to $83 After Topping $86 as Trump’s Hormuz Blockade Nears Its 4pm ET Deadline; June CPI Cools Sharply to 3.5% Just Hours Before Fed Chair Kevin Warsh’s Debut Congressional Testimony; Dow Recovers as IBM Craters 22%
CPI cools sharply to 3.5% just hours before Fed Chair Warsh’s debut testimony, while Brent pares gains to $83 after topping $86 ahead of the Hormuz blockade deadline and the Dow claws back gains despite IBM’s 22% earnings-driven collapse.
Tuesday’s U.S. session opened with a genuine surprise on the inflation front, per live Reuters, Bloomberg, Investing.com and FXStreet coverage. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that the June Consumer Price Index fell 0.4% on a seasonally adjusted monthly basis, the largest one-month drop in over six years, pulling the annual rate down to 3.5% from May’s 4.2% and well below the roughly 3.8% consensus forecast. The retreat was driven overwhelmingly by a sharp pullback in gasoline prices tied to last month’s brief US-Iran ceasefire, even as core CPI, which strips out food and energy, held flat on the month and remained elevated at 2.6% year-on-year. Treasury yields fell across the curve on the print, with the 2-year down around 7 basis points to near 4.19% and the 10-year down roughly 3 basis points to near 4.575%, while the Dollar Index eased about 0.6% and US stocks opened mixed-to-higher, with the Nasdaq outperforming.
The disinflationary relief, however, is colliding directly with a live geopolitical shock. Brent crude spiked more than 4% intraday to above $86.85 a barrel, its highest level in roughly a month, before easing back to trade near $83.40 as some traders take profit and square positions ahead of the 4pm Eastern Time deadline for President Donald Trump’s reinstated naval blockade of Iranian shipping and his proposed 20% toll on all non-Iranian cargo transiting the Strait of Hormuz. The move follows a third consecutive night of US airstrikes on Iranian targets and Iranian attacks on tankers transiting the waterway, with Citi warning the shipping-fee proposal “materially raises the risk of further military escalation.” Traffic through Hormuz has reportedly plunged more than 50% week-on-week as shippers grow wary of the still-unsettled conflict, a dynamic that could keep upward pressure on crude and, by extension, on the very inflation figures that cooled today, even as today’s intraday pullback shows the market is not yet treating the blockade deadline as a one-way bet.
Against this backdrop, Fed Chair Kevin Warsh delivered his first semiannual monetary policy testimony before the House Financial Services Committee at 10am ET. In prepared remarks, Warsh said the Fed’s policymakers “have no tolerance for persistently elevated inflation” and pledged that “if we get policy right — and we will — the inflation surge of the last five years will be a thing of the past,” while notably declining to offer any forward guidance on the central bank’s next policy move. His remarks came a day after Fed Governor Christopher Waller warned that a hot CPI print would require the Fed to consider hiking rates “in the near term,” a scenario today’s cooler data appears to have deferred, though Warsh flagged that the ongoing AI-driven investment boom is “the most striking feature of the economy right now” and one the Fed is watching closely for inflationary spillover. He returns for a second day of testimony before the Senate Banking Committee on Wednesday.
US equities are reflecting the tug-of-war between the CPI relief and idiosyncratic corporate news. The Dow Jones Industrial Average is up modestly near 52,520.71, roughly flat to fractionally higher on the day, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite are also firmer, but gains across the blue-chip index are being tempered by a roughly 22% collapse in IBM shares after the company flagged a surprise capital-expenditure shift among clients that hit its software and infrastructure business. Meanwhile, JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, Bank of America, Citigroup and Wells Fargo have all kicked off the Q2 bank earnings season, with several posting record or better-than-expected profits even as their shares traded lower, reflecting a market more focused on the rate and geopolitical backdrop than on the results themselves. In currencies, USD/CAD has eased toward 1.4082 as Canada’s status as a net energy exporter helps the Loonie draw strength from the earlier crude surge even as the broader Dollar softens post-CPI, while USD/CHF remains pressured near 0.8077 as the Swiss franc continues to attract safe-haven flows tied to the Gulf escalation, with the Swiss National Bank reiterating its readiness to intervene against excessive franc strength.
In commodities, Gold is firming back toward $4,082.57 an ounce as today’s lower Treasury yields offset the inflationary pressure of oil, even as the metal remains down more than 25% from January’s record high near $5,600 amid the broader repricing of Fed policy expectations. In digital assets, Bitcoin has rallied back above $64,000, adding to earlier gains on the view that cooler CPI reduces the odds of a near-term Fed hike, while BNB is lagging near $579.23, up modestly on the session but still underperforming Bitcoin’s bounce, as the broader crypto market sits in an Extreme Fear reading of 22 on the Fear & Greed Index amid the unresolved Hormuz standoff. Looking ahead through the remainder of the session, the decisive variables are Warsh’s continued Q&A before the House Committee, the market’s digestion of the bank earnings slate, and the 4pm ET deadline for the Hormuz blockade and cargo toll.
Sessions this event-heavy reward traders who can react in seconds, not minutes. Capital Street FX clients trade this CPI-and-Hormuz-driven volatility on our Zero Account‘s 0.0 Pips Spreads with 1:10000 Leverage, across 2000+ Instruments spanning FX, indices, commodities, bonds and crypto — backed by 24/7 Live Support for exactly this kind of headline-driven session.
U.S. Session Headlines
The stories driving price action across currencies, bonds, equities, commodities and crypto this session
U.S. Session Economic Calendar — 14 July 2026
Key releases and events shaping price action across today’s U.S. session (ET as noted)
| Time (ET) | Event | Actual / Detail | Impact | Market Read |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 🇺🇸8:30 AM | US June CPI Report | Headline -0.4% m/m, 3.5% y/y (vs 3.8% expected); Core flat m/m, 2.6% y/y (vs 2.9% expected) | 🔴 CRITICAL | Far cooler than expected, eases near-term Fed hike bets, yields and Dollar fall |
| 🇺🇸Overnight | Third Consecutive Night of US Strikes on Iran | US Central Command confirms further strikes on Iran’s ability to disrupt Hormuz shipping | 🔴 CRITICAL | Sets up today’s 4pm ET blockade deadline as the session’s key risk event |
| 🇺🇸10:00 AM | Fed Chair Kevin Warsh’s First House Testimony | Semiannual Monetary Policy Report testimony before House Financial Services Committee | 🔴 CRITICAL | Pledges inflation fight but offers no forward guidance on rates; Q&A ongoing |
| 🇺🇸Pre-Market | JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs, BofA, Citi, Wells Fargo Q2 Earnings | Several banks beat estimates, including JPMorgan’s record profit, but shares broadly lower | 🟢 MEDIUM | Earnings beats overshadowed by macro and geopolitical focus |
| 🇺🇸Pre-Market | IBM Preliminary Q2 Warning | Adjusted EPS $2.93 on $17.2B revenue, both below estimates; shares fell roughly 22% | 🟢 MEDIUM | Single biggest drag on the Dow Jones this session |
| 🇺🇸4:00 PM | Hormuz Blockade and 20% Toll Formally Take Effect | Naval blockade of Iranian shipping resumes; toll applies to all non-Iranian cargo transiting the strait | 🔴 CRITICAL | Key deadline risk for oil, yields and broad risk sentiment into the US close |
| 🇺🇸Wednesday | Fed Chair Warsh’s Senate Banking Testimony | Second day of semiannual testimony, this time before the Senate | 🟢 MEDIUM | Second chance for lawmakers to press Warsh on the rate path |
| 🇨🇦Wednesday | Bank of Canada Rate Decision | BoC expected to hold amid a “low fire, low hire” labour market backdrop | 🟢 MEDIUM | Next major catalyst for USD/CAD direction after today’s oil-driven move |
U.S. Session Trade Ideas — 14 July 2026
Eight structured setups — USD/CAD, USD/CHF, Gold, Brent Crude Oil, Dow Jones, US 5Y Yield, Bitcoin, BNB — with updated prices, levels, and full fundamental and technical analysis
USD/CAD
Fundamental Backdrop
The Canadian Dollar is trading firmly against the Greenback near 1.4120, drawing support from two reinforcing dynamics: Canada’s status as a major net energy exporter means the more-than-4% surge in Brent crude toward $86.85 a barrel is directly supportive of the Loonie, while today’s cooler-than-expected US CPI print has taken some of the recent hawkish edge off Fed rate-hike pricing, weighing on the broader Dollar. That said, the picture is not one-sided: the Bank of Canada faces its own “low fire, low hire” labour-market backdrop heading into Wednesday’s rate decision, where policymakers are widely expected to hold, and any hawkish surprise from Fed Chair Warsh’s ongoing testimony or the afternoon’s Hormuz blockade deadline could quickly restore broad Dollar demand and cap the Loonie’s advance.
Technical Outlook
USD/CAD has eased back from last week’s highs near 1.4247, with the pair now testing the lower half of its recent multi-week range. ActionForex’s daily outlook frames the pair’s intraday bias as neutral-to-lower while downside is likely to be contained above the 1.3965 support-turned-resistance zone from prior consolidation. Immediate support sits near 1.4080-1.4100 (the round-number and short-term moving-average confluence, ahead of this trade’s 1.4010 target), while resistance is layered at 1.4185 (this trade’s sell-rally zone) and 1.4247 (last week’s high). A confirmed close below 1.4080 would open a deeper slide toward 1.4010 and the June range lows, while a reclaim of 1.4200 would undercut the bearish setup and risk a retest of 1.4247.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) continued Brent crude direction into the 4pm ET Hormuz blockade deadline, the primary near-term driver of Loonie strength; (2) Fed Chair Warsh’s ongoing testimony and Q&A for any hawkish surprise that could revive broad Dollar demand; (3) Wednesday’s Bank of Canada rate decision and accompanying statement; (4) any further reaction in US Treasury yields to today’s CPI print; (5) US bank earnings reaction as a read on broader risk appetite.
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USD/CHF
Fundamental Backdrop
The Swiss franc continues to draw safe-haven demand against the backdrop of the unresolved US-Iran conflict, with USD/CHF holding near 0.8090 as investors seek shelter from the Gulf escalation while the broader Dollar softens on today’s cooler CPI print. The Swiss National Bank left its policy rate unchanged at 0% at its last meeting and reiterated its willingness to intervene in currency markets to curb excessive franc appreciation and imported deflation, a genuine headwind to further Swiss franc strength that traders should weigh against the currency’s haven appeal. Swiss inflation slowed to 0.5% in June, its first decline in eight months, giving the SNB additional room to tolerate near-term franc gains without an immediate policy response.
Technical Outlook
USD/CHF has pulled back from its recent highs near 0.812-0.814 as Hormuz-driven haven flows and the post-CPI Dollar pullback combine to pressure the pair lower within its recent range. Resistance sits at 0.8140 (this trade’s sell-rally zone, aligned with recent consolidation highs) and 0.8180 (this trade’s stop), while support lies at 0.8060 (the pair’s early-July low) and 0.8010 (this trade’s target, near the year’s lows). A confirmed close below 0.8060 would open a retest of the 0.8010 zone, while a reclaim of 0.8140 would risk a squeeze back toward 0.8180 should safe-haven demand suddenly reverse.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) further Hormuz blockade headlines into the 4pm ET deadline, the primary driver of near-term franc demand; (2) any verbal intervention from the Swiss National Bank should franc strength accelerate; (3) Fed Chair Warsh’s ongoing testimony for signals on the Dollar’s broader trajectory; (4) US Treasury yield direction following today’s CPI-driven pullback; (5) any fresh escalation or de-escalation headlines from the US-Iran conflict.
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Gold (XAU/USD)
Fundamental Backdrop
Gold is trading near $4,022 an ounce, clawing back some of Monday’s more-than-2% decline as today’s cooler CPI print pulled Treasury yields lower across the curve, reducing the opportunity cost of holding the non-yielding metal. That tailwind is being partially offset by the Hormuz-driven surge in oil prices, which has historically supported gold through its inflation-hedge appeal, though for now the market appears to be weighing the disinflationary CPI surprise more heavily than the oil-driven inflation risk. Fed Chair Warsh’s testimony, which offered no forward guidance on rates, has left the path for gold data-dependent on how the remainder of the week’s testimony and Wednesday’s PPI report unfold. The metal remains down more than 25% from January’s record high near $5,600 amid this year’s broader repricing of Fed policy expectations.
Technical Outlook
Gold remains within a broader descending channel on the daily chart even as it stages a corrective bounce from Monday’s two-week lows near $3,985. Resistance is layered at $4,090 (the recent seller zone that has capped rallies) and $4,100 (this trade’s target), while support lies at $3,970 (this trade’s buy-dip zone, near the psychological $4,000 figure) and $3,910 (this trade’s stop, below the recent swing low). A confirmed close above $4,100 would open a retest of the broader channel top, while a break below $3,910 would risk an extension of the broader downtrend that has taken gold more than 25% off its January highs.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) Fed Chair Warsh’s continued Q&A for any hint on the Fed’s reaction function; (2) Wednesday’s US PPI report and the Fed’s Beige Book, both additional inflation and growth reads; (3) any further escalation or de-escalation in the Hormuz standoff ahead of and after the 4pm ET deadline; (4) US Treasury yield direction as the market digests today’s CPI surprise; (5) US Dollar Index trajectory into the bank-earnings-driven equity session.
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Brent Crude Oil
Fundamental Backdrop
Brent crude has surged more than 4% intraday to above $86.85 a barrel, its highest level since mid-June, as markets brace for President Trump’s reinstated naval blockade of Iranian shipping and his proposed 20% toll on all non-Iranian cargo transiting the Strait of Hormuz to take effect at 4pm ET today. The move extends Monday’s roughly 9.6% surge and follows a third consecutive night of US airstrikes on Iranian targets, with Iran’s Revolutionary Guard reportedly attacking at least two supertankers transiting Hormuz with their transponders disabled. Ship-tracking data shows transits through the strait have plunged more than 50% week-on-week, and analysts at Citi have warned the toll proposal “materially raises the risk of further military escalation,” a dynamic that could keep crude well-supported into and beyond today’s deadline even as OPEC has trimmed its 2026 demand growth forecast.
Technical Outlook
Brent has broken decisively higher out of its recent $71-$76 consolidation range, with the move accelerating on the back of Monday’s blockade announcement and today’s continued escalation headlines. Resistance now sits at $88.00 (a psychological level last tested during the earlier phase of the conflict) and $91.00 (this trade’s target), while support has shifted higher to $83.50 (this trade’s buy-dip zone, near the breakout point of the prior range) and $80.50 (this trade’s stop, near the top of the former consolidation). A confirmed close above $88.00 would open a run toward the $91-$94 zone last seen during the height of the February-March conflict, while a reversal back below $80.50 would suggest today’s blockade deadline is being priced as a de-escalation opportunity rather than a fresh supply shock.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) the formal 4pm ET implementation of the Hormuz blockade and cargo toll, the session’s single biggest catalyst for crude; (2) any Iranian response or further attacks on tankers transiting the strait; (3) US Strategic Petroleum Reserve drawdown headlines, given the buffer has already been substantially depleted this year; (4) OPEC commentary following its trimmed demand forecast; (5) any diplomatic overture that could quickly reverse the current risk premium.
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Dow Jones Industrial Average
Fundamental Backdrop
The Dow Jones Industrial Average is up modestly near 52,619, benefiting from today’s cooler CPI print, which has taken some pressure off near-term Fed rate-hike expectations, even as gains are being significantly tempered by a roughly 22% collapse in IBM shares after the company warned of a surprise capex shift among clients away from software and infrastructure toward hardware purchases. That single-stock drag stands in contrast to a broadly constructive Q2 bank earnings season, with JPMorgan posting a record profit and Bank of America and Wells Fargo both beating estimates, even though all three saw their shares slip as investors weighed the CPI-and-Hormuz macro backdrop over the results themselves. Semiconductor names, including Applied Materials, Teradyne and Monolithic Power Systems, are among the session’s stronger performers, helping offset some of the IBM-driven weakness in the broader index.
Technical Outlook
The Dow is consolidating just above Monday’s close of 52,498.64, itself a pullback from its recent all-time highs above 53,289 reached earlier this month. Resistance sits at 52,850 (Monday’s session high) and 53,300 (this trade’s target, near the recent record zone), while support lies at 52,150 (this trade’s buy-dip zone, near the 52-week uptrend line) and 51,750 (this trade’s stop, below last week’s low). A confirmed close above 52,850 would open a retest of the all-time high near 53,289, while a break below 51,750 would risk a deeper pullback given the index remains vulnerable to further Hormuz-driven volatility into the US close.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) continued reaction to the IBM earnings warning and any read-through to other legacy tech names; (2) further Q2 bank earnings commentary on the health of consumer and corporate lending; (3) Fed Chair Warsh’s ongoing testimony for any market-moving remarks; (4) the 4pm ET Hormuz blockade deadline and its impact on broad risk sentiment into the close; (5) any further AI-capex-related volatility among semiconductor and hyperscaler names.
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US 5-Year Treasury Yield
Fundamental Backdrop
The US 5-Year Treasury yield has eased to around 4.29% as today’s cooler-than-expected CPI print prompted a broad rally across the Treasury curve, with the 2-year down roughly 7 basis points to near 4.19% and the 10-year down around 3 basis points to near 4.575% on the day. That said, the disinflationary relief is running headlong into a genuine inflationary risk from the Hormuz blockade and cargo toll set to take effect this afternoon, which could reignite the same energy-driven price pressures that pushed yields to their highest levels in nearly two months just yesterday. Fed Chair Warsh’s testimony offered no forward guidance on rates, leaving Fed Governor Waller’s Monday warning that a hot inflation print would force the Fed to “consider raising rates in the near term” as the more hawkish anchor for the market, even after today’s softer data.
Technical Outlook
The 5-year yield has pulled back from Monday’s roughly seven-week high near 4.35%-4.40%, tracking the broader curve’s post-CPI rally. Support sits at 4.22% (this trade’s buy-dip zone, near last week’s pre-escalation lows) and 4.14% (this trade’s stop, near the June range lows), while resistance is layered at 4.35% (Monday’s high) and 4.48% (this trade’s target, a level not tested since the height of the February-March conflict). A confirmed move back above 4.35% would confirm the broader move higher in yields is resuming on oil-driven inflation risk, while a break below 4.14% would suggest the disinflationary CPI surprise is dominating the market’s rate-path pricing.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) Fed Chair Warsh’s continued Q&A and Wednesday’s Senate testimony for any shift in tone; (2) the 4pm ET Hormuz blockade deadline and its implications for energy-driven inflation risk; (3) Wednesday’s US PPI report and the Fed’s Beige Book; (4) any Treasury auction results this week as a read on demand for US debt; (5) CME FedWatch pricing for the July 28-29 FOMC meeting as it adjusts to today’s data.
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Bitcoin (BTC/USD)
Fundamental Backdrop
Bitcoin has climbed back above $63,000, up around 2% over the past 24 hours, as today’s much-cooler-than-expected CPI print reduces the near-term odds of a Fed rate hike, a genuine liquidity-supportive tailwind for risk assets including crypto. The move is notable given it comes against a backdrop of broader market caution: spot Bitcoin ETFs have registered renewed inflows even as the Fear & Greed Index sits at 22, an Extreme Fear reading, reflecting lingering anxiety tied to the unresolved US-Iran conflict and the looming Hormuz blockade deadline. Bitcoin has historically reacted violently to CPI surprises throughout 2026, and today’s cooler print fits the pattern of risk-on reactions to disinflationary data, though a hawkish surprise from Fed Chair Warsh’s ongoing testimony remains a real risk to the current bounce.
Technical Outlook
Bitcoin opened today’s session near $62,260, dipped modestly to test the $61,800-$62,000 zone traders have been defending, and has since firmed toward $63,400 on the CPI-driven relief. Resistance sits at $63,700 (the session’s earlier high) and $66,500 (this trade’s target, near the upper end of the recent consolidation), while support lies at $61,800 (this trade’s buy-dip zone) and $59,900 (this trade’s stop, below the psychological $60,000 level). A confirmed close above $63,700 would open a retest of the $66,000+ zone last traded before the current risk-off phase, while a break below $59,900 would risk a deeper slide given the Extreme Fear backdrop.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) Fed Chair Warsh’s continued testimony and Q&A for any hawkish or dovish surprise; (2) the 4pm ET Hormuz blockade deadline and its impact on broad risk appetite; (3) spot Bitcoin ETF flow data for confirmation of the reported institutional inflows; (4) any further US-Iran escalation or de-escalation headlines; (5) broader crypto market sentiment as measured by the Fear & Greed Index.
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BNB (BNB/USD)
Fundamental Backdrop
BNB is trading near $569, essentially flat on the session and down around 1.3% over the past week, notably underperforming Bitcoin’s cooler-CPI-driven bounce. The broader crypto market’s Fear & Greed Index reads 22, an Extreme Fear level, with community sentiment on BNB itself described as bearish, and total crypto market capitalization has fallen from $2.26 trillion to $2.23 trillion over the past day alongside a decline in trading volumes. BNB’s underperformance relative to Bitcoin fits a pattern of altcoins lagging during risk-off phases tied to the unresolved Hormuz standoff, even though today’s cooler CPI print provided a genuine, if uneven, tailwind across the broader digital-asset space.
Technical Outlook
BNB has fluctuated within a roughly $566-$580 range over the past day, with the broader daily structure continuing to look weak as the token struggles to reclaim its 100-day moving average, per recent technical commentary. Resistance sits at $584 (this trade’s sell-rally zone, near the top of the recent range) and $597 (this trade’s stop, near the prior consolidation high), while support lies at the $550 zone, where buyers have previously defended, and $543 (this trade’s target, below that support). A confirmed break below $550 would open a slide toward $543 and potentially lower given the Extreme Fear backdrop, while a reclaim of $584 would risk a squeeze back toward $597.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) broader Bitcoin and crypto-market direction following today’s CPI print, given BNB’s tendency to amplify broader risk moves; (2) the 4pm ET Hormuz blockade deadline and its impact on risk appetite; (3) any Binance-specific regulatory or product headlines; (4) BNB Chain ecosystem activity and burn-related news flow; (5) the broader Fear & Greed Index for signs of sentiment stabilizing or deteriorating further.
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Understanding Today’s U.S. Session
Answers to the questions traders are asking about today’s cross-asset moves
U.S. Session Summary — Tuesday, 14 July 2026 (Updated Mid-Session)
Tuesday’s U.S. session is defined by a genuine tug-of-war between disinflationary relief and a live geopolitical shock, per live Reuters, Bloomberg, Investing.com and FXStreet coverage. June’s CPI cooled far more than expected to 3.5% year-on-year, the largest monthly price decline in over six years, easing near-term Fed rate-hike bets just hours before Fed Chair Kevin Warsh delivered his first congressional testimony, in which he pledged the Fed has “no tolerance for persistently elevated inflation” while declining to signal the central bank’s next move. That relief is colliding with a fresh Gulf escalation, with Brent crude surging more than 4% intraday to above $86.85 a barrel, its highest level in a month, as President Trump’s reinstated Hormuz blockade and 20% cargo toll are due to take effect at 4pm ET today following a third consecutive night of US strikes on Iran. US equities are choppy rather than convincingly higher, with the Dow Jones up modestly near 52,619 even as IBM shares collapsed roughly 22% on a surprise earnings warning, while JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs, Bank of America, Citigroup and Wells Fargo all kicked off the Q2 bank earnings season with several beats that were largely overshadowed by the macro and geopolitical backdrop. In currencies, USD/CAD has eased toward 1.4120 as the oil-exporting Loonie draws strength from the crude surge even as the broader Dollar softens, while USD/CHF remains pressured near 0.8090 on persistent Swiss franc safe-haven demand. In commodities, Gold is firming back toward $4,022 an ounce as lower yields offset oil-driven inflation risk, and in digital assets, Bitcoin has rallied back above $63,000 on reduced near-term hike odds even as BNB lags near $569 amid an Extreme Fear reading across the broader crypto market. Highest-conviction session idea: buy Brent crude dips toward $83.50, targeting $91.00 — the blockade and toll are a genuine, near-certain catalyst set to formally take effect this afternoon, and the sharp drop in Hormuz shipping traffic suggests the risk premium has room to extend, though a swift diplomatic breakthrough or de-escalation remains a real risk that could quickly unwind today’s gains.
For the individual instruments: USD/CAD sell rallies toward 1.4185, stop 1.4235, target 1.4010 — oil-driven Loonie strength and a broadly softer post-CPI Dollar are genuine tailwinds to further downside, though a hawkish surprise from Warsh’s ongoing testimony or the Hormuz deadline itself is a real risk that could quickly restore broad Dollar demand. USD/CHF sell rallies toward 0.8140, stop 0.8180, target 0.8010 — Swiss franc safe-haven demand and Dollar softness are genuine tailwinds, though the SNB’s readiness to intervene against excessive franc strength is a real headwind to further declines. Gold buy dips toward $3,970, stop $3,910, target $4,100 — today’s lower yields are a genuine tailwind, though the metal’s broader downtrend from January’s record high remains a real headwind to a sustained recovery. Brent Crude buy dips toward $83.50, stop $80.50, target $91.00 — the formal blockade and toll implementation this afternoon is a near-certain catalyst, though a swift Hormuz de-escalation is a real risk to the current risk premium. Dow Jones buy dips toward 52,150, stop 51,750, target 53,300 — today’s CPI relief and broadly solid bank earnings are genuine tailwinds, though IBM’s collapse and the looming Hormuz deadline are real headwinds that could cap further gains. US 5Y Yield buy dips toward 4.22%, stop 4.14%, target 4.48% — oil-driven inflation risk into this afternoon’s blockade deadline is a genuine tailwind to further yield increases, though today’s cooler CPI print is a real headwind that could keep yields anchored lower near-term. Bitcoin buy dips toward $61,800, stop $59,900, target $66,500 — today’s CPI relief and reported ETF inflows are genuine tailwinds, though the broader market’s Extreme Fear sentiment and the Hormuz deadline are real risks to a sustained rally. BNB sell rallies toward $584, stop $597, target $543 — broader Extreme Fear sentiment and BNB’s underperformance versus Bitcoin are genuine tailwinds to further downside, though a broad crypto relief rally on today’s cooler CPI is a real risk of a near-term bounce. The decisive variables for the remainder of the session are Fed Chair Warsh’s continued testimony and Q&A, the market’s ongoing digestion of Q2 bank earnings, and the 4pm ET Hormuz blockade and toll deadline. Size positions accordingly, and note that the geopolitical backdrop remains exceptionally fluid and carries genuine event risk that could reshape sentiment sharply intraday.
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