China’s Q2 GDP Growth Slows Sharply to 4.3%, Missing Forecasts, as Nikkei and Kospi Rally on Cooler US CPI; Aussie Holds Near Three-Week High Just Under 0.7000 as Yen Stays Pinned Above 162 | Asian Session – Technical Analysis | 15 July 2026
China’s Q2 GDP Growth Slows Sharply to 4.3%, Missing the 4.5% Forecast and Marking Its Weakest Pace Since Late 2022, as Nikkei and Kospi Extend a Powerful Rally on Cooler US CPI; Aussie Dollar Holds Near a Three-Week High Just Under 0.7000 as the Yen Stays Pinned Above 162
China’s Q2 GDP growth slows sharply to 4.3%, missing forecasts and marking its weakest pace since late 2022, while Nikkei and Kospi extend a powerful rally on cooler US CPI and the Aussie holds firm just under 0.7000 as the yen stays pinned above 162.
Wednesday’s Asian session is dominated by China’s second-quarter GDP release, per live Reuters, Bloomberg, Investing.com and FXStreet coverage. The National Bureau of Statistics reported annual growth of 4.3%, below the roughly 4.5% consensus from a Reuters poll of 54 economists and down sharply from the first quarter’s 5.0% expansion, marking the slowest pace of growth since the fourth quarter of 2022. On a quarterly basis, GDP rose 0.9%, in line with expectations but down from 1.3% in the first quarter. Analysts pointed to weak domestic demand and the lingering drag from the oil shock tied to the Iran war as key culprits, even as resilient exports and stronger industrial output partially offset the softness. Beijing’s official 4.5%-5.0% full-year growth target is now at genuine risk for the first time since the pandemic, and the International Monetary Fund has separately flagged that a renewed Middle East conflict could extend commodity price volatility and further threaten global supply chains.
The activity data released alongside the GDP figure painted a more nuanced picture than the headline miss suggested. June retail sales rose 1.0% year-on-year, sharply beating the -0.1% consensus and reversing May’s 0.6% decline, while industrial production accelerated to 5.3% from an expected 4.6% and May’s 4.5% reading, supported by resilient export demand for electric vehicles, batteries and AI-related hardware — China’s monthly car exports surpassed one million units for the first time in June. Fixed-asset investment, however, fell a steeper-than-expected 5.7% year-to-date, extending its decline from May’s 4.1% drop and underscoring the continued weakness in China’s property sector and private capital spending. China’s trade surplus widened to $125.62 billion in June, a dynamic that risks exacerbating trade tensions with partners including the European Union even as it cushions the broader growth picture.
The market reaction has been notably muted relative to the size of the miss, a reflection of just how much Tuesday’s US inflation surprise has already reshaped the session’s backdrop. AUD/USD, the cleanest liquid proxy for Chinese growth in the G10, is holding firm near a three-week high just under the psychological 0.7000 level, with broad US Dollar weakness following Tuesday’s much-cooler-than-expected US CPI print — which pulled annual inflation down to 3.5% from 4.2% — comfortably offsetting the drag from the China data. Regional equities are broadly participating in the post-CPI relief: the Nikkei 225 has climbed roughly 0.9% to above 68,300 and the Topix has added about 1% to 4,080, with AI and semiconductor names including Kioxia Holdings, Advantest, Tokyo Electron and Lasertec leading gains, even as Japan’s own May machinery orders data fell more than expected in a sign of continued weak business investment. In South Korea, the Kospi and SK Hynix are extending an extraordinary rebound after Monday’s historic rout, which had briefly triggered circuit breakers and an 8% single-day plunge before a sharp reversal.
In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng Index has rallied sharply to 24,751.09, up roughly 1.7% from Tuesday’s close of 24,340.73, as the broadly risk-on tone spreading across the region on the softer US inflation data outweighs the China GDP miss. Alibaba and Tencent have shown some stabilisation after a difficult stretch, though the index remains well off its recent highs. In currencies, USD/JPY remains pinned above 162, its weakest level for the yen in roughly four decades, as the threat of Bank of Japan or Ministry of Finance intervention continues to act as the only meaningful brake on further weakness even as the structural US-Japan yield differential continues to favour Dollar strength. In commodities, Silver has pulled back below $60 an ounce to trade near $58.41 even as softer US Treasury yields continue to cushion precious metals broadly, with the metal still well off January’s record high near $121.67, while Natural Gas holds a tight range near $2.90 per MMBtu as ample US production and a softening mid-summer weather outlook offset still-elevated cooling demand. In digital assets, Bitcoin holds above $64,000 on reduced near-term Fed hike odds, and within today’s featured majors Chainlink is sharply outperforming the broader crypto market on fresh Aave CCIP adoption news, even as Cardano continues to lag the post-CPI bounce amid a prolonged technical downtrend. Looking ahead through the remainder of the session, the decisive variables are any further reaction in Chinese equities and yuan-sensitive currencies, continued Hang Seng price action into the close, and the approach of Fed Chair Kevin Warsh’s second day of congressional testimony and Wednesday’s Bank of Canada rate decision later in the US session.
Sessions this data-heavy reward traders who can react in seconds, not minutes. Capital Street FX clients trade this China-GDP-and-CPI-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.
Asian Session Headlines
The stories driving price action across currencies, equities, commodities and crypto this session
Asian Session Economic Calendar — 15 July 2026
Key releases and events shaping price action across today’s Asian session (Hong Kong Time / HKT unless noted)
| Time (HKT) | Event | Actual / Detail | Impact | Market Read |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 🇨🇳10:00 AM | China Q2 GDP + June Retail Sales, Industrial Production, Fixed-Asset Investment | GDP 4.3% y/y (vs 4.5% exp); Retail Sales 1.0% y/y (vs -0.1% exp); IP 5.3% y/y (vs 4.6% exp); FAI -5.7% YTD (vs -4.9% exp) | 🔴 CRITICAL | Slowest GDP growth since Q4 2022, but activity data mixed; AUD/USD barely reacts |
| 🇯🇵9:00 AM JST (8:00 HKT) | Nikkei 225 & Topix Open | Nikkei +0.9% above 68,300; Topix +1% to 4,080, led by AI and chip names | 🟢 HIGH | Tracking Wall Street higher on cooler US CPI; Kioxia, Advantest, Tokyo Electron, Lasertec lead |
| 🇯🇵Pre-Market | Japan May Machinery Orders | Fell more than expected, signalling continued weak business capital investment | 🟢 MEDIUM | Adds to the case for BOJ caution on further near-term policy tightening |
| 🇰🇷Morning | Kospi & SK Hynix Extended Rebound | Kospi and SK Hynix continue to claw back Monday’s circuit-breaker-triggering rout | 🟢 HIGH | Chip-sector short squeeze continues to ripple across the region |
| 🇭🇰10:00 AM | Hang Seng Index Open | Opens near Tuesday’s 24,340.73 close, rallies sharply to 24,751.09 intraday | 🟢 MEDIUM | Risk-on Asia tape outweighs the GDP miss; Alibaba, Tencent watched for stabilisation |
| 🇺🇸Ongoing | Hormuz Blockade & 20% Cargo Toll (Effective Since Tuesday 4pm ET) | Naval blockade and cargo toll formally in force; Hormuz shipping traffic down over 50% w/w | 🔴 CRITICAL | Keeps oil elevated, an indirect headwind for the Yen and a swing factor for risk sentiment |
| 🇺🇸10:00 PM (10:00 AM ET) | Fed Chair Warsh’s Senate Banking Testimony (Day Two) | Second day of semiannual testimony, this time before the Senate Banking Committee | 🟢 HIGH | Markets watching for any shift in tone from Tuesday’s House remarks |
| 🇨🇦Thu 2:00 AM (2:00 PM ET Wed) | Bank of Canada Rate Decision | BoC widely expected to hold amid a soft labour-market backdrop | 🟢 MEDIUM | Next major catalyst for CAD; limited direct spillover into today’s Asian majors |
Asian Session Trade Ideas — 15 July 2026
Seven structured setups — USD/JPY, AUD/USD, Silver, Natural Gas, Hang Seng, Cardano, Chainlink — with updated prices, levels, and full fundamental and technical analysis
USD/JPY
Fundamental Backdrop
USD/JPY remains pinned above 162 — a level not seen for the Yen in roughly four decades — as the structural US-Japan interest-rate differential continues to overwhelm the intermittent threat of Bank of Japan or Ministry of Finance intervention. Tuesday’s cooler-than-expected US CPI print took some of the hawkish edge off near-term Fed pricing, yet the broader story of a Fed under Chair Kevin Warsh maintaining a firmer policy stance than the BOJ has kept the pair well supported. Japan’s own May machinery orders data disappointed, reinforcing the case for continued BOJ caution on further near-term tightening, even as elevated oil prices tied to the Hormuz blockade add to Japan’s import bill and, by extension, to the case for Yen weakness.
Technical Outlook
USD/JPY continues to trade within a medium-term ascending channel, with the pair holding just below the closely watched 161.95-162.84 intervention-sensitive zone that has capped rallies since late June. Support sits near 160.73 (the former 2026 high, now acting as a floor) ahead of this trade’s 161.30 buy-dip zone, while resistance is layered at 161.95 and the multi-decade high near 162.84. A confirmed break above 162.84 would open a run toward this trade’s 163.20 target, while a close below 160.73 would risk a deeper slide toward the 50- and 100-day moving averages.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) any verbal or actual intervention signals from Japan’s Ministry of Finance or the Bank of Japan should Yen weakness accelerate; (2) continued Brent crude direction as a driver of Japan’s import-cost and inflation outlook; (3) US Treasury yield moves ahead of Fed Chair Warsh’s second day of testimony; (4) any fresh Hang Seng or Kospi volatility that could shift regional risk appetite; (5) Thursday’s Japanese producer price data for pipeline inflation signals.
Trade this pair and 60+ FX crosses on our Zero Account‘s 0.0 Pips Spreads — Open an Account at Capital Street FX.
AUD/USD
Fundamental Backdrop
AUD/USD is holding firm near a three-week high just under the psychological 0.7000 level, drawing support from broad US Dollar weakness following Tuesday’s much-cooler-than-expected US CPI print, which pulled annual inflation down to 3.5% and eased near-term Fed hike bets. That resilience is notable given China’s Q2 GDP grew just 4.3% year-on-year, missing the roughly 4.5% consensus — ordinarily a genuine headwind for the Aussie given China’s role as Australia’s largest trading partner. The details underneath the GDP miss offered some offset, however, with June retail sales and industrial production both beating forecasts, tempering the drag from the weaker headline growth figure and the steeper fixed-asset investment decline.
Technical Outlook
AUD/USD is pressing against the psychological 0.7000 barrier after a third consecutive week of gains, holding above both its 20- and 100-period moving averages on the 4-hour chart. Support sits near 0.6926 (the 100-period moving average) and 0.6880 (the 200-day moving average), while resistance is layered at 0.6993 (immediate horizontal resistance) and the 0.7000 psychological level itself, ahead of the 2026 peak near 0.7280. A sustained break above 0.7000 would open a run toward this trade’s 0.7050 target and beyond, while a slide back below 0.6926 would risk a retest of the 0.6880 support zone.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) any follow-through reaction in Chinese equities and the yuan to today’s GDP and activity data; (2) continued Hang Seng and Shanghai Composite price action as a read on regional risk appetite; (3) iron ore and broader commodity price moves as a direct Aussie driver; (4) US Treasury yield direction ahead of Fed Chair Warsh’s Senate testimony; (5) Thursday’s Australian Consumer Inflation Expectations release.
Trade this pair and 60+ FX crosses on our Zero Account‘s 0.0 Pips Spreads — Open an Account at Capital Street FX.
Silver (XAG/USD)
Fundamental Backdrop
Silver has slipped back below the $60 mark this morning to trade near $58.41, giving back part of Monday-Tuesday’s bounce even as Tuesday’s cooler US CPI print and the resulting decline in Treasury yields continue to provide broad underlying support across the precious-metals complex. Continued US-Iran tensions and elevated oil prices tied to the Hormuz blockade are adding further demand for tangible assets as an inflation and geopolitical hedge, even as silver’s heavy industrial-use component leaves it more volatile than gold to swings in the broader risk-sentiment backdrop. The metal remains well off January’s record high near $121.67, having given back a substantial portion of its earlier-year gains amid the broader repricing of Fed policy expectations.
Technical Outlook
Silver is consolidating within a well-defined near-term range after printing lower highs over the prior week. Support sits near $57.50 (this trade’s buy-dip zone) and $56.50 (this trade’s stop, near last week’s swing low), while resistance is layered at $59.50-$60.00 (a well-tested near-term ceiling) and this trade’s $60.50 target. A confirmed close above $60.00 would open a run toward the $65 handle, while a break back below $57.50 would risk a deeper slide toward the $56.50 support zone and a resumption of the recent bearish structure.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) continued US Treasury yield direction following Tuesday’s CPI-driven pullback; (2) any fresh Hormuz blockade headlines that could add to safe-haven demand; (3) Fed Chair Warsh’s Senate testimony later in the US session for any hawkish surprise; (4) broader Dollar Index direction as the primary near-term driver of precious-metals pricing; (5) industrial demand signals from today’s China activity data.
Trade Silver and 30+ commodities on our Zero Account‘s 0.0 Pips Spreads — Open an Account at Capital Street FX.
Natural Gas
Fundamental Backdrop
Natural gas is holding a tight range near $2.90 per MMBtu, pressured by robust US production and ample supply even as summer cooling demand remains seasonally elevated. Freeport LNG’s ongoing maintenance turnaround, which began July 10 and runs through late August, has trimmed feedgas demand and export flows, adding to the near-term supply overhang. US working natural gas inventories were running roughly 6-7% above the five-year average heading into mid-July, and softening weather forecasts for the second half of the month have further capped any sustained upside, even as electric-power demand for gas-fired generation continues to set records this summer.
Technical Outlook
Natural gas has traded in a narrow range between roughly $2.87 and $3.05 over the past week, having fallen sharply from levels above $3.20 in late June amid the combination of strong supply and reduced export demand. Resistance sits at $3.05 (this trade’s sell-rally zone, aligned with recent range highs) and $3.20 (this trade’s stop), while support lies at $2.87 (the recent two-month low) and this trade’s $2.70 target. A confirmed close below $2.87 would open a slide toward the $2.70 zone, while a reclaim of $3.05 would undercut the bearish setup and risk a squeeze back toward $3.20.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) updated weather forecasts for the remainder of July and their implications for power-sector cooling demand; (2) weekly EIA storage injection data due later this week; (3) any update on the pace of Freeport LNG’s maintenance turnaround and its impact on export feedgas flows; (4) Lower 48 production data for signs of continued output growth; (5) broader energy-complex direction tied to the ongoing Hormuz blockade.
Trade Natural Gas and 30+ commodities on our Zero Account‘s 0.0 Pips Spreads — Open an Account at Capital Street FX.
Hang Seng Index
Fundamental Backdrop
The Hang Seng Index has rallied sharply to 24,751.09, up roughly 1.7% from Tuesday’s 24,340.73 close, as the broadly risk-on tone spreading across Asian equities following Tuesday’s much-cooler-than-expected US CPI data outweighs the disappointment of China’s 4.3% Q2 GDP print. The mixed underlying activity data — a beat on retail sales and industrial production against a miss on fixed-asset investment — has left investors without a clean directional signal, while Alibaba and Tencent have shown tentative stabilisation after a difficult stretch tied to the Hang Seng Tech Index’s roughly 36% drawdown from its October peak to its June low. Hong Kong’s active IPO pipeline, including Shein’s planned listing, continues to provide an offsetting source of market interest even as broader sentiment stays cautious.
Technical Outlook
The Hang Seng has broken decisively higher out of its recent horizontal trend channel, clearing the prior 24,450-24,500 resistance shelf that had capped rallies over the past several sessions. Support now sits near 24,450 (former resistance, now this trade’s buy-dip level) and 24,150 (this trade’s stop, near the base of today’s breakout candle), while resistance is layered at 24,900-25,000 (today’s session high zone) and this trade’s 25,300 target, near the index’s more recent highs. A confirmed close above 25,000 would strengthen the bullish case, while a slide back below 24,150 would undercut the breakout and risk a retest of the 23,765 support zone.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) any follow-through reaction across mainland Chinese equities and the yuan to today’s GDP and activity data; (2) continued newsflow on Hong Kong’s IPO pipeline, including Shein’s planned listing; (3) Alibaba and Tencent price action as bellwethers for the broader Hang Seng Tech complex; (4) broader US futures direction ahead of the US cash open; (5) any fresh Hormuz-related headlines that could shift regional risk appetite.
Trade the Hang Seng and 20+ global indices on our Zero Account‘s 0.0 Pips Spreads — Open an Account at Capital Street FX.
Cardano (ADA/USD)
Fundamental Backdrop
Cardano continues to underperform the broader digital-asset market on a relative basis, trading up only modestly near $0.163 even as Bitcoin holds above $64,000 on reduced near-term Fed hike odds following Tuesday’s cooler US CPI print. ADA has been in a prolonged technical downtrend for much of 2026, with 24-hour moves often falling in the -1% to -2.5% range on low conviction and a roughly 40%+ decline over the trailing month at its worst point. The network maintains strong staking participation and a deliberate, peer-reviewed development roadmap, but adoption metrics and DeFi activity have not translated into sustained price strength, leaving the token more exposed to broad risk-off rotations than higher-beta peers.
Technical Outlook
Cardano remains well below its 50- and 200-day moving averages, both of which are declining and confirming a bearish trend alignment on daily and weekly charts. Immediate resistance sits at $0.165 (this trade’s sell-rally zone) with a more meaningful hurdle at $0.172-$0.176 (this trade’s stop, near recent swing highs), while critical support sits at $0.148-$0.150, a level that has held on multiple recent tests. A decisive break below $0.148 would open a slide toward the $0.130-$0.140 zone, while a reclaim of $0.176 would undercut the bearish setup and risk a squeeze higher.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) Bitcoin’s continued direction as the dominant driver of broader crypto-market sentiment; (2) any fresh Cardano ecosystem or governance news that could shift momentum; (3) the broader Crypto Fear & Greed Index reading following yesterday’s Extreme Fear print; (4) US regulatory developments around the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act; (5) continued relative-performance divergence versus higher-beta altcoins such as Chainlink.
Trade Cardano and 30+ digital assets on our Zero Account‘s 0.0 Pips Spreads — Open an Account at Capital Street FX.
Chainlink (LINK/USD)
Fundamental Backdrop
Chainlink is sharply outperforming the broader digital-asset market, trading near $8.36 after Aave — DeFi’s largest lending protocol — adopted Chainlink’s Cross-Chain Interoperability Protocol (CCIP) as the infrastructure powering its new mobile app, following an updated Aave risk framework that scored CCIP highest on cross-chain security. The adoption news adds to a string of recent institutional wins for Chainlink, including collaborations with DTCC on blockchain-based collateral management and a $1 billion-plus migration of Bitcoin-backed assets from Lombard onto CCIP, reinforcing the network’s positioning as the standard oracle and interoperability layer for tokenised, institutional-grade finance.
Technical Outlook
Chainlink has broken above its short-term trendline resistance and is testing the $8.30-$8.37 zone, a level that has recently acted as resistance following a sharp bounce off the $7.20-$7.36 support zone. A sustained close above $8.37 would open a run toward $9.34 and this trade’s $8.80 target along the way, while a failure to hold above $8.00 would risk a pullback toward the $7.50-$7.85 support-turned-buy-zone. The broader trend remains challenged — LINK is still down roughly 85% from its 2021 all-time high near $52.88 — but today’s adoption-driven momentum marks a genuine near-term shift in structure.
Session Catalysts
Watch for: (1) any follow-through newsflow on further institutional CCIP adoption; (2) Bitcoin’s broader direction as the dominant driver of crypto-market sentiment; (3) trading volume confirmation on any breakout above the $8.37 resistance zone; (4) US regulatory developments around the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act; (5) continued relative-performance divergence versus lagging altcoins such as Cardano.
Trade Chainlink and 30+ digital assets on our Zero Account‘s 0.0 Pips Spreads — Open an Account at Capital Street FX.
Asian Session FAQ
Answers to the questions traders are asking about today’s session
Asian Session Summary — Wednesday, 15 July 2026 (Live Update)
Wednesday’s Asian session is defined by a genuine tension between a disappointing China growth print and the broadly risk-on aftershock of Tuesday’s cooler US inflation data, per live Reuters, Bloomberg, Investing.com and FXStreet coverage. China’s Q2 GDP grew just 4.3% year-on-year, missing the roughly 4.5% consensus and marking the slowest pace of growth since the pandemic-affected fourth quarter of 2022, even as June retail sales and industrial production both beat forecasts and offered a partial offset to the softer headline figure. The market’s muted reaction to that miss speaks to just how thoroughly Tuesday’s much-cooler-than-expected US CPI print — which pulled annual US inflation down to 3.5% and eased near-term Fed rate-hike bets — has reshaped the broader backdrop heading into Asian trade. Regional equities are broadly participating in that relief, with the Nikkei 225 up roughly 0.9% above 68,300 and the Topix adding about 1% to 4,080 on the back of AI and semiconductor strength, while the Kospi and SK Hynix continue to claw back Monday’s historic rout. The Hang Seng, meanwhile, has rallied sharply to 24,751.09, well above Tuesday’s 24,340.73 close, as the broader risk-on tape outweighs the China GDP disappointment. In currencies, USD/JPY remains pinned above 162 — its weakest level for the Yen in roughly four decades — as the structural US-Japan yield differential continues to overwhelm intermittent intervention threats from Tokyo, while AUD/USD holds firm near a three-week high just under 0.7000 on broad Dollar softness. In commodities, Silver has pulled back below $60 to trade near $58.41 even as lower US yields cushion the broader metals complex, while Natural Gas holds a tight range near $2.90 on ample supply. In digital assets, Bitcoin holds above $64,000 on reduced near-term hike odds, and Chainlink is sharply outperforming on fresh Aave CCIP adoption news even as Cardano continues to lag. Highest-conviction session idea: buy Chainlink dips toward $7.85, targeting $8.80 — the Aave CCIP adoption news is a genuine, concrete institutional catalyst layered on top of a broadly supportive post-CPI risk backdrop, though a reversal in Bitcoin’s broader direction or a failure to hold above $8.00 would undercut the setup.
For the individual instruments: USD/JPY buy dips toward 161.30, stop 160.60, target 163.20 — the structural US-Japan yield differential remains a genuine tailwind, though the ever-present threat of BOJ or Ministry of Finance intervention is a real risk that could quickly cap or reverse gains. AUD/USD buy dips toward 0.6935, stop 0.6885, target 0.7050 — broad post-CPI Dollar softness is a genuine near-term tailwind, though a further run of disappointing Chinese data remains a real headwind to sustained Aussie strength. Silver buy dips toward $57.50, stop $56.50, target $60.50 — lower US yields and continued Hormuz-driven safe-haven demand are genuine tailwinds, though the metal’s pullback below $60 underscores its ongoing volatility. Natural Gas sell rallies toward $3.05, stop $3.20, target $2.70 — ample US supply and Freeport LNG’s maintenance-driven export lull are genuine headwinds to price, though any sharp resurgence in late-July heat could quickly challenge the bearish setup. Hang Seng buy dips toward 24,450, stop 24,150, target 25,300 — the broadly risk-on Asian tape is a genuine tailwind that has already driven a sharp breakout, though today’s China GDP miss is a real headwind that could reassert itself if follow-through data disappoints. Cardano sell rallies toward $0.165, stop $0.172, target $0.148 — the token’s prolonged technical downtrend and lack of a near-term catalyst are genuine headwinds, though a broader crypto-market risk-on extension is a real risk to the downside setup. Chainlink buy dips toward $7.85, stop $7.50, target $8.80 — today’s Aave CCIP adoption news is a genuine, concrete tailwind, though the token’s still-depressed long-term trend and Bitcoin’s broader direction remain real risks to a sustained breakout. The decisive variables for the remainder of the session are any further reaction in Chinese equities and the yuan, continued Hang Seng and Kospi price action into their respective closes, and the approach of Fed Chair Warsh’s second day of Senate testimony and Wednesday’s Bank of Canada rate decision later in the US session. Size positions accordingly, and note that the geopolitical and macro backdrop remains exceptionally fluid and carries genuine event risk that could reshape sentiment sharply intraday.
Ready to act on today’s setups? Open an Account with Capital Street FX and trade every instrument covered in this report on our Zero Account‘s 0.0 Pips Spreads and 1:10000 Leverage, across 2000+ Instruments, with a welcome deposit bonus and 24/7 Live Support on hand for every session.
Not sure which account fits your style? Compare our Account Types side by side with our Account Comparison tool, browse current Promotions / Bonus offers, and trade from our Trading Platform suite. Funding is simple via our Deposit & Withdrawal options. For ongoing coverage, explore our Forex Analysis Pages, Commodity Analysis Pages and Crypto Analysis Pages, plus our Daily Market Analysis and Weekly Market Analysis reports and the full Economic Calendar. New to trading? Visit our Trading Education / Blog, or reach our Contact Us / Live Support team any time.
Access Live Asian Markets →