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SpaceX’s Record $1.75T IPO Prices Tonight as Wall Street Rebounds Through the Iran War & a Hot-Headline CPI | Technical Analysis – U.S. Session | 11 June 2026

June 11, 2026
Research Desk
SpaceX’s Record $1.75T IPO Prices Tonight as Wall Street Rebounds Through the Iran War & a Hot-Headline CPI | Capital Street FX U.S. Session Brief · 11 June 2026
Thursday, 11 June 2026  ·  U.S. Session Daily Technical Analysis 🇺🇸 LIVE · SPACEX IPO NIGHT

SpaceX’s Record $1.75T IPO Prices Tonight
as Wall Street Rebounds Through War & a Hot CPI

S&P 500 7,325 ▲ · SpaceX (SPCX) $135 IPO ● · USD/CAD 1.3999 ▲ · USD/CHF 0.7991 ▼ · Gold $4,086.80 ▼ · Wheat $5.84 ▼ · US 10Y 4.55% ▲ · BTC $63,104 ▲ · SOL $65.09 ▲
Analyst: Capital Street FX Research Desk · Session: New York / Chicago, 11 June 2026 · LIVE · BREAKING: SpaceX (SPCX) to price its record $1.75tn IPO tonight at $135, Nasdaq debut 12 Jun · US strikes Iran again, Hormuz blockaded · May CPI 4.2% YoY, core +0.2% m/m · Jobless claims 229K · PPI & WASDE today · Fed Funds: 3.50–3.75% (Dec hike fully priced) · BoC: ~2.50% · SNB: ~0.25% · DXY firm · WTI ~$90–94 · VIX ~21 · FOMC 17 Jun
Session Overview · Live

Wall Street opens the U.S. session steadying after a brutal stretch, caught between three forces pulling in different directions: the largest initial public offering in history pricing after the bell, a re-escalating US-Iran war that keeps the Strait of Hormuz blockaded, and an overnight inflation print that ran hot on the headline but cooled where it counts. The single dominant catalyst is corporate, not macro — SpaceX (SPCX) is set to price its IPO tonight at $135 a share for a roughly $1.75 trillion valuation and begin trading on the Nasdaq tomorrow, the biggest listing ever attempted.

The tape is a tentative rebound off oversold conditions. The S&P 500 trades near 7,325 (up ~0.8%) and the Dow adds ~226 points to ~50,145 after Wednesday’s ~950-point rout, as the soft core-CPI read and a swift end to the latest round of Iran strikes let dip-buyers back in. But breadth is poor: the small-cap Russell 2000 lags hard at −1.1%, the chip complex stays fragile after last week’s ~$1tn semiconductor washout, and the VIX hovers near 21. In rates and commodities the picture is split: the US 10-year yield holds firm near 4.55% on sticky energy inflation and a fully-priced December Fed hike, while gold sags to a seven-month low near $4,086.80 despite the war — a strong dollar and high real yields overwhelming the haven bid. USD/CAD presses 1.40 (near 1.3999) with oil cushioning the loonie, and the safe-haven franc keeps USD/CHF testing the 0.80 figure near 0.7991.

The crypto tape is the cleanest read on risk appetite. Bitcoin sits near $63,104 (up ~1.6%), having reclaimed $60,000 after briefly breaking below it for the first time since 2024, with the soft core-CPI print trimming losses but ETF outflows and the firm-dollar backdrop capping the bounce. Solana steadies near $65.09 with sentiment at extreme fear, underpinned by its Alpenglow upgrade and staking-enabled ETFs. The binary that overhangs the session: whether SpaceX’s mechanical, float-scarce debut can pull risk appetite higher into a war-shadowed, hot-inflation backdrop — or whether the Iran headline tape and a hawkish Fed cap every rebound. Open a live account to trade the U.S. session.

S&P 500
7,325
▲ rebound off lows
SpaceX (SPCX)
$135
● prices tonight
USD/CAD
1.3999
▲ testing 1.40
USD/CHF
0.7991
▼ pressing 0.80
Gold (XAU)
$4,086.80
▼ 7-month low
Wheat (ZW)
$5.84
▼ near 2-mo low
US 10Y
4.55%
▲ sticky inflation
Bitcoin (BTC)
$63,104
▲ reclaimed $60k
Solana (SOL)
$65.09
▲ extreme fear

Section 0 · Breaking News

U.S. Session Headlines — 11 June 2026

Live market-moving events as the record SpaceX IPO, a re-escalating Iran war and a split-screen CPI converge on the New York and Chicago open

🟠 Critical · IPO / Equities — TONIGHT
SpaceX (SPCX) to Price Tonight at $135 for a ~$1.75 Trillion Valuation — the Largest IPO in History, Nasdaq Debut Tomorrow
Space Exploration Technologies is set to price its IPO after the close tonight at a reported $135 per share, targeting a raise of up to $75bn and a roughly $1.75tn valuation — by an enormous margin the biggest listing ever, eclipsing Saudi Aramco’s 2019 record. Trading opens tomorrow, 12 June, on the Nasdaq under ticker SPCX. The structure is unusual: roughly 30% of the book is routed directly to retail via Robinhood, Fidelity and Schwab, and a March 2026 Nasdaq fast-entry rule lets the stock join the Nasdaq-100 within 15 trading days — forcing an estimated ~$7bn of mechanical QQQ buying. Goldman Sachs leads a syndicate that includes Morgan Stanley, BofA, Citi and JPMorgan. The vertically integrated space-connectivity-AI group (Starlink 9m+ users, the February xAI merger) is valued at ~109–116x 2025 revenue; Morningstar pegs fair value near $780bn, ~48% below the deal.
SPCX · IPO · STARLINK · NASDAQ-100
🟠 High Impact · US Macro — OVERNIGHT
US May CPI a Split-Screen Print — Hot 4.2% Headline, but Core Cools to +0.2% m/m, Tempering Fed-Hike Fears
May CPI hit 4.2% YoY (up from 3.8%), the hottest since May 2023 and a third straight monthly acceleration, with headline up 0.5% m/m. But core — stripping food and energy — rose just 0.2% m/m, below the 0.3% consensus, leaving core near 2.9% YoY. Energy did the damage: prices jumped ~23.5% YoY and gasoline ~40.5%, accounting for over 60% of the monthly gain, a direct consequence of the Iran war and a blockaded Hormuz. The soft core handed risk assets a conditional reprieve and trimmed crypto losses, but traders kept a 25bp December Fed hike fully priced. Today’s PPI and the weekly jobless-claims print (229K, above the 220K consensus) are the next reads into the 17 June FOMC.
CPI · CORE · ENERGY · FED
🔴 Critical · Geopolitics — LIVE
US-Iran War Re-Escalates — Trump Threatens to Seize Kharg Island; Iran Names Starlink and Musk Firms as Military Targets
Washington completed a fresh round of “self-defense” strikes on Iran overnight, with President Trump warning the US would hit Iran “very hard” again tonight, seize Kharg Island and take “total control” of the country’s energy sector — raising fears of a ground escalation. Iran reportedly targeted US vessels in the Strait of Hormuz, conduit for roughly a fifth of global oil, which remains near-totally closed. In a direct market twist, Iranian state media said Tehran will treat Elon Musk’s companies — including SpaceX’s Starlink — as military targets, one day before SPCX is due to list. WTI trades near $90–94 and Brent ~$92, keeping a structural war premium that is inflationary and risk-off.
IRAN · HORMUZ · OIL · STARLINK
🔵 High Impact · Rates / Commodities
US 10Y Holds 4.55% as Gold Sags to a 7-Month Low; Wheat Eyes the June WASDE With the Tightest US Crop Since 1965
The 10-year Treasury yield steadied near 4.55% as traders weighed the energy-driven inflation spike against the soft core read; a December rate hike stays fully priced into the 17 June FOMC. Gold, paradoxically, sits near a seven-month low around $4,086.80 — down ~13% on the month from the late-January $5,589 record — as a firm dollar and high real yields swamp the war bid, though J.P. Morgan still targets $6,000 by Q4. In grains, today’s USDA WASDE and crop-production reports land with US winter wheat output pegged at the smallest since 1965 on drought, even as a record speculative short, weak export sales and improved Midwest rains keep CBOT wheat near a two-month low around $5.84 (583.69¢).
10Y · GOLD · WHEAT · WASDE
🟢 Medium Impact · Crypto
Crypto Steadies on the CPI Relief — Bitcoin Reclaims $60k Near $63,104, Solana Holds $65.09 at Extreme Fear
Digital assets bounce with sentiment still at extreme fear. Bitcoin trades near $63,104 (up ~1.6%) after briefly breaking below $60,000 for the first time since 2024, with the soft core-CPI print paring losses but persistent ETF outflows — roughly $4.4bn across major crypto funds over 13 sessions — capping the rebound. Solana near $65.09 (Fear & Greed at 9) is structurally supported by its Alpenglow consensus upgrade targeting 100–150ms finality, the Firedancer client, staking-enabled spot ETFs and the SIMD-0550 proposal to cut future emissions, even as it sits ~78% below its $293 all-time high. The complex remains hostage to the dollar, real yields and the Iran tape.
BITCOIN · SOLANA · ETF · RISK

Section 1 · Economic Calendar

U.S. Session Data — 11–18 June 2026

Key releases and event risks through the SpaceX listing and next week’s FOMC (times in ET)

Time (ET) Region Event Forecast Previous Impact
Wed 10 Jun 08:30 🇺🇸US CPI May (YoY / Core m/m) — released 4.2% / +0.3% 4.2% / +0.2% (actual) CRITICAL
Thu 11 Jun 08:30 🇺🇸US PPI May / Initial Jobless Claims — / 220K — / 229K (actual) MEDIUM
Thu 11 Jun 12:00 🇺🇸US USDA WASDE / Crop Production MEDIUM
Thu 11 Jun ~16:00 🇺🇸US SpaceX (SPCX) IPO Pricing (after close) $135 / ~$1.75T CRITICAL
Fri 12 Jun ~09:30 🇺🇸US SpaceX (SPCX) Nasdaq Trading Debut $135 IPO CRITICAL
Fri 12 Jun 10:00 🇺🇸US UoM Consumer Sentiment / Inflation Exp. (Prelim) MEDIUM
Tue 16 Jun 08:30 🇺🇸US Retail Sales (May) MEDIUM
Wed 17 Jun 14:00 🇺🇸US FOMC Rate Decision + Powell Presser 3.50–3.75% (Hold) 3.50–3.75% CRITICAL
Thu 18 Jun 07:00 🇬🇧UK BoE Bank Rate Decision 3.75% (Hold) 3.75% MEDIUM

Section 2 · Trade Ideas

U.S. Session Setups — 11 June 2026

Eight instruments; fundamental backdrop, technical levels, and directional bias for the U.S. session and week ahead

USD/CAD
Spot · Oil Premium Caps the Pair While a Wide BoC–Fed Rate Gap Underpins the Dollar
1.3999
▲ testing the 1.40 top
June Range
1.379–1.400
Fed Funds
3.50–3.75%
BoC Rate
~2.50%
WTI Crude
~$90–94
Hormuz
Blockaded
Direction Bias
NEUTRAL
• NEUTRAL USD/CAD — Range-Trade the 1.375–1.40 Band; Fade the Top on the Oil Bid
Entry (Short)1.4010
Stop Loss1.4080
Take Profit1.3780
USDCAD Daily Chart
Daily Chart · CSFX Research · TradingView · 11 Jun 2026

Fundamental Backdrop

USD/CAD near 1.3999, testing the top of its range at the round 1.40 figure, is caught in a genuine two-way standoff. Supporting the pair (USD up): a wide and stable interest-rate gap — the Fed at 3.50–3.75% with a December hike fully priced versus a Bank of Canada that has been cutting toward ~2.50% — plus risk-off, safe-haven dollar demand on the Iran war. Pulling it lower (CAD up): Canada is a major crude exporter, and with WTI elevated near $90–94 and the Strait of Hormuz blockaded, the energy premium is a direct loonie tailwind that has historically anchored this pair for decades. The BoC’s own April projections assumed Brent drifting toward $75; with the war premium intact those look optimistic, giving the CAD an oil-buffer that offsets the rate disadvantage. The net is a pair that grinds in a band rather than trends.

Technical Outlook

The pair has consolidated in a 1.375–1.400 range through June and is now pressing the upper end at the round 1.40 figure. First resistance is 1.4000–1.4030 (the round number and the sell-rally zone), then 1.4080 which frames the stop — a sustained break above 1.41 would signal the rate gap and dollar haven bid are overpowering the oil story. On the downside, 1.3850 is the first support, then the 1.3780 target and the 1.370 floor that has held the June range. With oil capping rallies and the rate gap capping declines, fading strength into 1.40 is cleaner than chasing a breakout in either direction.

Session Catalysts

Watch for: (1) the Iran/Hormuz headline tape and crude direction — a credible de-escalation that reopens the Strait would send oil lower and USD/CAD sharply higher as the energy premium unwinds; (2) today’s US PPI and jobless claims into the 17 June FOMC; (3) the broad risk tone, since a deeper equity sell-off lifts the haven dollar. This is a range-trade with the oil-vs-rates tension defining both boundaries; size for two-sided headline risk.

USD/CHF
Spot · The Safe-Haven Franc Holds Firm into a War-Shadowed, Risk-Off Tape
0.7991
▼ pressing the 0.80 cap
Recent Range
0.781–0.800
SNB Rate
~0.25%
Fed Funds
3.50–3.75%
CHF Haven Bid
Strong
12-mo Trend
USD −~5%
Direction Bias
NEUTRAL-BEARISH
▼ NEUTRAL-TO-BEARISH USD/CHF — Sell Into the 0.80 Cap on the Franc’s Safe-Haven Strength
Entry (Short)0.7995
Stop Loss0.8060
Take Profit0.7820
USDCHF Daily Chart
Daily Chart · CSFX Research · TradingView · 11 Jun 2026

Fundamental Backdrop

USD/CHF near 0.7991 captures the classic battle of two havens. The Swiss franc, managed by the SNB, is the market’s premier crisis currency, and a re-escalating Iran war plus a fragile equity tape keep sustained safe-haven flows running its way; the pair has fallen nearly 5% over twelve months on divergent policy and franc demand. Against that, the dollar is itself a haven and carries a large yield advantage — the Fed at 3.50–3.75% with a December hike priced versus an SNB near 0.25% — and hot US headline inflation plus firm Treasury yields give the greenback a near-term floor. The medium-term fundamental balance still tilts toward franc strength (low Swiss inflation, resilient economy, persistent uncertainty), with the main offset being possible SNB intervention to cap excessive appreciation.

Technical Outlook

The pair has pushed up to press the round 0.80 figure — the psychological cap and the level sellers are defending. Immediate resistance is 0.8000–0.8030, then 0.8060 which frames the stop; a sustained close above it would signal the dollar’s yield-and-haven advantage is winning out, opening 0.8150. On the downside, first support is 0.7900–0.7920, then the 0.7820 target; deeper, 0.7770 frames the franc-strength extension. With the franc bid intact but the pair testing 0.80, selling into the 0.799–0.800 zone is the cleaner expression; the bearish case invalidates on a daily close above 0.8060.

Session Catalysts

Watch for: (1) the Iran tape and equity risk appetite — further escalation deepens the franc bid; (2) US PPI/claims and the broad dollar, which provide the offsetting yield pull; (3) any SNB commentary on franc strength or intervention risk. This is a sell-rallies trade on safe-haven demand, with the two-haven tug-of-war the principal source of chop.

Gold (XAU/USD)
Spot · ~$4,086.80 — A War-and-Central-Bank Floor vs. a Strong-Dollar, High-Yield Headwind
$4,086.80
▼ 7-month low, −13% on month
Jan Record
~$5,589
200-day MA
~$4,340
50-day MA
~$4,730
JPM Q4 Target
~$6,000
Real Yields
Headwind
Direction Bias
NEUTRAL-BULLISH
▲ NEUTRAL-TO-BULLISH GOLD — Buy Dips on the Geopolitical Floor, Respect the Rate Headwind
Entry (Long)$4,020
Stop Loss$3,860
Take Profit$4,340
GOLD Daily Chart
Daily Chart · CSFX Research · TradingView · 11 Jun 2026

Fundamental Backdrop

Gold near $4,086.80 presents one of the session’s sharpest contradictions: it sits at a seven-month low, down roughly 13% on the month from the late-January $5,589 all-time high, even as a hot war rages. The reason is the macro mix. The headwind is dominant right now — a strong-than-expected May payroll report lifted Fed rate-hike odds, pushing Treasury yields and the dollar higher, and high real yields are kryptonite for a zero-coupon asset. The floor is structural — the Iran war, the Hormuz closure and persistent central-bank accumulation keep a hard bid under dips, and J.P. Morgan still targets $6,000/oz by Q4 2026. The honest read is a metal “stuck in a technical no-man’s land” above its 200-day average (~$4,340) but capped below its 50-day (~$4,730), waiting for the rate or war narrative to break the deadlock.

Technical Outlook

Bullion is basing in the high-$4,000s after the slide from the January record. First support is $4,020–$4,050 (the dip-buy entry), then the psychological $4,000 line and the $3,860 area that frames the stop — a break there would confirm the rate headwind is winning toward the mid-$3,800s. On the upside, the 200-day MA near $4,340 (the target) is the first decisive hurdle; reclaiming it re-opens $4,500 and a path back toward the 50-day near $4,730. With a war floor under price but momentum still negative, accumulating into $4,020 weakness in measured size is the disciplined expression rather than chasing.

Session Catalysts

Watch for: (1) the US 10-year yield and dollar — the dominant near-term driver, with any softening directly gold-supportive; (2) today’s PPI and the path into the 17 June FOMC; (3) the Iran/Hormuz tape, the principal upside catalyst; (4) central-bank buying headlines. This is a buy-dips trade on the geopolitical and reserve-demand floor, with disciplined stops into a still-hawkish rate backdrop.

Wheat (ZW)
CBOT · ~$5.84/bu (583.69¢) — The Tightest US Crop Since 1965 vs. a Record Spec Short & Weak Demand
$5.84
▼ near 2-month low
HRW (KC)
~$6.38/bu
US Winter Crop
Smallest since 1965
Spec Position
Record net short
Export Sales
−26% YoY
El Niño
Emerging
Direction Bias
NEUTRAL-BULLISH
▲ NEUTRAL-TO-BULLISH WHEAT — Buy Dips on the Tight US Balance Sheet & Squeeze Risk into WASDE
Entry (Long)$5.78
Stop Loss$5.55
Take Profit$6.50
WHEAT Daily Chart
Daily Chart · CSFX Research · TradingView · 11 Jun 2026

Fundamental Backdrop

CBOT (soft red) wheat near $5.84/bu (583.69¢) sits close to a two-month low, having given back most of the spring drought-and-war rally, while Kansas City hard red holds firmer near $6.38. The market is a coiled spring of opposing forces. Bullish: the US winter-wheat crop is pegged at the smallest since 1965 on a widespread drought, all-wheat production is heading for the lowest since the early 1970s, 2026/27 US ending stocks are projected down ~18%, an El Niño is emerging that threatens global production, and China has pledged ~$17bn of US farm-goods buying. Bearish: managed money holds a record net short (the largest one-week bearish shift on record), new-crop export sales run ~26% below last year, US flour demand has slumped, and improved Midwest rains plus a weak corn market — “king corn” sets the tone — cap rallies. Today’s USDA WASDE and crop-production reports are the binary that can ignite the heavily-short market.

Technical Outlook

Wheat is basing just above the early-June low near $5.75, with momentum stretched to the downside after the long-liquidation slide. First support is $5.78–$5.80 (the dip-buy entry), then $5.55 which frames the stop — a sustained break there would confirm the bearish corn/demand story is overwhelming the tight-supply narrative. On the upside, $6.10 is the first hurdle, above which $6.30 and then the $6.50 target re-open the path toward the spring highs on any weather or WASDE surprise. With a record spec short and the tightest US crop in six decades, the asymmetry favours accumulating dips and respecting a tight stop into the report.

Session Catalysts

Watch for: (1) today’s WASDE ending-stocks and crop-production prints — a bullish surprise into a record short is a squeeze setup; (2) US Midwest and Plains weather plus the El Niño outlook; (3) the corn market, the dominant technical driver of the grain complex; (4) China purchase flow and new-crop export sales. This is a buy-dips trade on the tight US balance sheet, with the WASDE report the principal near-term catalyst either way.

S&P 500
Index · ~7,325 — A Relief Rebound Off Oversold vs. the Chip Selloff, War Risk & a Hawkish Fed
7,325
▲ extending the rebound
Recent Record
~7,387 (9 Jun)
10 Jun Close
7,267 (−1.62%)
VIX
~21
Russell 2000
−1.10% (lagging)
FOMC (17 Jun)
Dec hike priced
Direction Bias
NEUTRAL
• NEUTRAL S&P 500 — Buy Dips for the Relief Bounce, but Hedge the Iran & Fed Binaries
Entry (Long)7,180
Stop Loss6,950
Take Profit7,500
SP500 Daily Chart
Daily Chart · CSFX Research · TradingView · 11 Jun 2026

Fundamental Backdrop

The S&P 500 near 7,325 is rebounding after a punishing run — Wednesday’s ~1.6% drop and ~950-point Dow rout followed last week’s roughly $1tn semiconductor washout, the worst chip day in six years. The index is balancing opposing forces. Supportive: the soft core-CPI print revived hopes the energy spike is not embedding into broad inflation, a swift end to the latest Iran strikes let dip-buyers back in, and the economy remains resilient with claims still historically low. Headwinds: a high-beta chip complex that swings the whole tape, a live war premium on oil that is both inflationary and risk-off, poor breadth (the Russell 2000 lagging at −1.1% signals narrow leadership), a VIX near 21, and a Fed with a December hike fully priced that caps the discount-rate relief. The result is a two-sided, headline-driven tape into the 17 June FOMC — with tomorrow’s record SpaceX debut a fresh sentiment swing factor.

Technical Outlook

The index has rebounded from the lows into the 7,300–7,330 area, still below the ~7,387 record. First support is 7,180–7,200 (the dip-buy entry and prior pivot), then 6,950 which frames the stop — a sustained break there would confirm a deeper risk-off and chip-led unwind toward 6,800. On the upside, 7,350 is the immediate hurdle, above which 7,400 and then the 7,500 target re-open the path back above the record. With a lower-high structure post-record but a firm dip-buy bid underneath, accumulating into 7,180 weakness is the cleaner expression — while explicitly hedging the Iran tape and the FOMC, the two binaries that can swing the index hardest.

Session Catalysts

Watch for: (1) the chip/AI tape — the dominant high-beta swing factor; (2) the Iran/oil headline that drives risk sentiment and the inflation premium; (3) today’s PPI/claims and the path into the FOMC; (4) tomorrow’s SpaceX listing, which can lift or sap broader risk appetite. Cash-index positions carry gap risk into both the global tape and the 17 June Fed — size accordingly and treat the meeting as the key binary.

BTC/USD
Crypto · ~$63,104 — Reclaimed $60k on the CPI Relief vs. ETF Outflows & a Firm Dollar
$63,104
▲ +1.6% on the day
$60k Line
Reclaimed
Sentiment
Extreme Fear
ETF Flows (13d)
−$4.4B
CPI Read
Soft core relief
Real Yields
Headwind
Direction Bias
NEUTRAL-BULLISH
▲ NEUTRAL-TO-BULLISH BTC — Dip-Accumulate While $60k Holds, Contingent on the Risk Tape
Entry (Long)$60,500
Stop Loss$57,800
Take Profit$68,000
BTCUSD Daily Chart
Daily Chart · CSFX Research · TradingView · 11 Jun 2026

Fundamental Backdrop

Bitcoin near $63,104 is up roughly 1.6% on the day, having reclaimed the $60,000 figure after briefly breaking below it for the first time since 2024 — a level it is now defending. The divergence between weak sentiment (extreme fear) and a tentative price bid is the story. Supportive: the soft core-CPI print revived the “Fed look-through” case and trimmed losses across risk, and the asset is deeply oversold after the flush. Headwinds: spot-BTC ETFs have bled roughly $4.4bn across major crypto funds over 13 sessions, a firm dollar and high real yields pressure the whole complex, and the Iran war keeps a risk-off overhang. The clean read is that BTC is a high-beta proxy for global risk appetite right here — the thesis improves materially only if $60,000 holds and the dollar/yield backdrop softens into the FOMC.

Technical Outlook

BTC is basing just above the reclaimed $60,000 line after the break-and-recover. First support is $60,000–$60,500 (the dip-accumulation entry), then the $57,800 area that frames the stop; a daily close below $58k would signal the recovery has failed and open a retest of the lows. On the upside, $64,000 is the first hurdle, above which $66,000 and then the $68,000 target come into view on any risk-on stabilisation. The disciplined approach is to accumulate into $60,500 in measured size, respecting the $57,800 stop, because the firm-dollar and ETF-outflow backdrop can extend the drawdown regardless of the relief bid.

Session Catalysts

Watch for: (1) the $60,000 line holding — the dominant near-term variable; (2) ETF flow prints, the swing factor for spot demand; (3) the dollar, real yields and the path into the 17 June FOMC; (4) the equity-risk tape and tomorrow’s SpaceX debut as a sentiment proxy. Treat this as a catalyst-contingent dip-buy into a defended level, not a high-conviction long, until the risk backdrop turns.

Solana (SOL)
Crypto · ~$65 — Alpenglow Upgrade & Staking ETFs vs. Extreme Fear and a Fragile Tape
$65.09
▲ steadying at the lows
Market Cap
~$37B (#7)
All-Time High
~$293
Fear & Greed
9 (Extreme)
Alpenglow
100–150ms finality
Spot ETF
Staking-enabled
Direction Bias
NEUTRAL-BULLISH
▲ NEUTRAL-TO-BULLISH SOL — Small-Size Dip-Accumulate on the Upgrade Story, Contingent on BTC
Entry (Long)$62.00
Stop Loss$56.00
Take Profit$80.00
SOL/USD Daily Chart
Daily Chart · CSFX Research · TradingView · 11 Jun 2026

Fundamental Backdrop

Solana near $65.09 is down hard, ~78% below its $293 all-time high, with sentiment at extreme fear (Fear & Greed near 9) after a sector-wide liquidation flush. The gap between weak price and strengthening fundamentals is the case. Concrete catalysts: the Alpenglow upgrade — the network’s most significant consensus change since launch, replacing Proof-of-History/TowerBFT to target near-instant 100–150ms finality — is in testing with a 2026 mainnet rollout; the Firedancer client continues to mature; spot SOL ETFs launched with staking enabled (a yield component Bitcoin and Ether ETFs lack) and have drawn selective inflows even amid broad redemptions; the SIMD-0550 proposal would cut future emissions; and corporate treasuries such as Forward Industries hold millions of SOL. The macro caveat is decisive: with ETF outflows broad and the dollar firm, the thesis does not play out until Bitcoin stabilises and risk appetite turns.

Technical Outlook

SOL is basing in the low-to-mid $60s after the squeeze, well below recent highs and far under the $293 record. First support is $62–$63 (the dip-accumulation entry and the line bulls must defend), then the $56 area that frames the stop; a break below $56 would signal the macro liquidity drain is overwhelming the upgrade story toward the low-$50s. On the upside, $70 is the first hurdle, above which $76 and then the $80 target come into view on any BTC-led stabilisation. The disciplined approach is to accumulate into $62 weakness in small size, respecting the $56 stop, since the high-beta complex can extend the drawdown regardless of Solana’s own catalysts.

Session Catalysts

Watch for: (1) Bitcoin holding $60,000 — the dominant variable for the whole complex; (2) Alpenglow rollout and Firedancer milestones — the idiosyncratic bull drivers; (3) SOL ETF flows and staking-yield headlines; (4) the dollar/real-yield backdrop into the FOMC. Treat this as a small-size, catalyst-backed accumulation into weakness, not a high-conviction long, until BTC and the risk tape stabilise.

US 10Y Yield
Treasuries · 4.55% — Sticky Energy Inflation & a Priced December Hike vs. War Haven Flows
4.55%
▲ firm into FOMC
10 Jun Close
~4.52%
Fed Funds
3.50–3.75%
Dec Hike
Fully priced
Headline CPI
4.2% YoY
Haven Bid
War flows
Yield Bias
RANGE / HIGHER
• NEUTRAL-TO-HIGHER YIELDS — Range-Trade 4.45–4.65%; Lean to Higher Yields on Sticky Inflation
Yield Support4.45%
Yield Pivot4.55%
Yield Resistance4.65%
US10Y Daily Chart
Daily Chart · CSFX Research · TradingView · 11 Jun 2026

Fundamental Backdrop

The 10-year Treasury yield has steadied near 4.55%, little changed from Wednesday’s ~4.52% close, trapped between two forces. Pushing yields higher (bond-bearish): a three-year-high 4.2% headline CPI, a war-driven energy shock that is directly inflationary, a resilient labour market, and a December Fed hike that remains fully priced — all of which argue against the market pricing cuts. Pulling yields lower (bond-bullish): the soft +0.2% core read gave the “look-through” camp something to work with, and the Iran war drives periodic safe-haven flows into Treasuries that cap yields on risk-off days. The result is a yield that holds a relatively tight band, with the bias modestly toward higher yields while energy inflation stays hot, but with a firm haven floor under any spike. Today’s PPI and the path into the 17 June FOMC are the near-term arbiters.

Technical Outlook

The 10-year is consolidating around the 4.55% pivot. First yield support (price resistance) is 4.45%, the level that has capped the rally in yields on risk-off days; a sustained move below it would signal haven flows and a softening Fed path are winning, opening 4.35%. On the upside, 4.65% is the immediate yield resistance — a decisive break above it, driven by a hot PPI or a hawkish Fed, would re-open the 4.75% area and the cycle highs. With inflation sticky but a war floor under prices, the disciplined approach is to treat 4.45–4.65% as the operative band and lean toward higher yields rather than chasing a duration rally before the FOMC.

Session Catalysts

Watch for: (1) today’s PPI and jobless claims — the next inflation and labour reads; (2) Treasury auction demand and the path into the 17 June FOMC and Powell’s guidance; (3) the Iran/Hormuz tape, which drives both the energy-inflation impulse and the haven bid; (4) the dollar and oil. This is a range-trade with a mild higher-yield lean; the FOMC is the binary that can break the band in either direction.


Section 3 · Deep Analysis

Key Questions for the U.S. Session

Detailed answers to the session’s most important analytical questions

SpaceX is pricing the largest IPO in history at a $1.75 trillion valuation while a top analyst pegs fair value 48% lower. How can both numbers be defensible?
Because the two numbers are answering different questions, and the gap is the whole trade. The $1.75tn IPO price is a market-clearing number — it is whatever underwriters judge that scarce supply and enormous demand will absorb, and the structure is engineered to maximise that demand: a deliberately small initial free float, roughly 30% of the book routed straight to retail through Robinhood, Fidelity and Schwab, and a March 2026 Nasdaq rule that fast-tracks mega-IPOs into the Nasdaq-100 within 15 trading days, forcing index funds to buy an estimated ~$7bn of stock mechanically. None of that is a fundamental judgment; it is supply-and-demand mechanics that can produce a sharp opening premium regardless of intrinsic worth. Morningstar’s ~$780bn fair value is the other question entirely: what are the discounted cash flows actually worth? At $1.75tn the company trades around 109–116x 2025 revenue, a multiple that assumes near-flawless execution across launch, Starlink (9m+ users, ~69% of revenue) and the freshly merged xAI stack. The honest synthesis is that the debut can rise on mechanics even as the valuation is stretched on fundamentals — which is exactly why the setup is a small-size, two-way event trade: the float-scarcity premium and the valuation gap can both express violently, and a stable price only forms once passive flows and a real shareholder base settle in over the first sessions. The live wildcard layered on top: Iran has named Musk’s firms, including Starlink, as military targets on the eve of the listing.
The US CPI headline ran hot at 4.2%, yet stocks are rebounding and the market calls it a relief. How can a three-year-high inflation print be good news?
Because the market reads the composition, not the headline. The 4.2% top-line is the hottest since May 2023, but it was almost entirely an energy story: energy prices jumped about 23.5% year-on-year and gasoline around 40.5%, together accounting for over 60% of the monthly increase — a direct consequence of the Iran war and the blockaded Strait of Hormuz. The number investors actually use to judge underlying, sticky inflation is core CPI, which strips out food and energy, and that cooled to just +0.2% month-on-month, below the +0.3% consensus, leaving core near 2.9% year-on-year. That distinction matters for policy: an energy-driven spike is a supply shock central banks often look through, because rate hikes cannot fix it, whereas a broad core acceleration is what forces tightening. A soft core says inflation is not yet embedding into the broader economy, which keeps the Fed from having to get more aggressive and lets oversold equities and crypto bounce. The honest caveat is that this is a reprieve, not an all-clear: traders kept a 25bp December hike fully priced, and if the energy shock persists long enough to seep into core via shipping, production and services costs, the look-through argument collapses. That is also why gold is near a seven-month low and the 10-year holds 4.55% — the rates market is treating the relief as conditional.
There is a war on, the Strait of Hormuz is blockaded, and oil is elevated — so why is gold at a seven-month low instead of a record high?
Because gold answers to real interest rates and the dollar at least as much as to geopolitics, and right now those forces are pulling the opposite way. The intuitive view — war should mean record gold — ignores that bullion is a zero-coupon asset: when real (inflation-adjusted) yields rise, the opportunity cost of holding metal that pays nothing goes up, and money rotates into Treasuries that now yield ~4.55%. A stronger-than-expected May payroll report lifted Fed rate-hike odds, which pushed both yields and the dollar higher, and that combination has dragged gold down roughly 13% on the month from its late-January $5,589 record — even with the war running. The geopolitical bid and persistent central-bank buying are still there; they are why gold has a floor and has not collapsed, and why J.P. Morgan still targets $6,000 by Q4. But a floor is not a catalyst. The metal is, in one strategist’s phrase, stuck in a technical no-man’s land — above its 200-day average near $4,340 but capped below its 50-day near $4,730 — waiting for either the rate narrative to soften (which would let the war bid dominate) or the war to escalate enough to overwhelm the yield headwind. That is why the setup is to buy dips on the floor while respecting a stop, rather than to assume the headlines alone will lift it.
Wheat and gold both have a bullish supply or geopolitical story, yet both sit near multi-month lows. Why fade the weakness rather than respect the downtrend?
Because in both cases the bearish price action and the bullish underlying have decoupled, and that decoupling is the asymmetry. Take wheat: the US winter-wheat crop is pegged at the smallest since 1965 on a widespread drought, all-wheat output is heading for the lowest since the early 1970s, 2026/27 ending stocks are projected down ~18%, an El Niño is emerging, and China has pledged ~$17bn of US farm-goods buying — an unambiguously tight supply backdrop. Yet the price sits near a two-month low because managed money has built a record net short (the largest one-week bearish shift on record), new-crop export sales run ~26% below last year, flour demand has slumped, and a weak corn market is dragging the whole complex. When a market is this heavily short into a genuinely tight balance sheet, the risk skews upward: a bullish surprise — from today’s WASDE, a weather scare, or fresh Chinese buying — can force a violent short-covering squeeze. That is the same logic as gold: a structural floor (war, central-bank demand, JPM’s $6,000 target) under a price that momentum has pushed to a multi-month low on a rate-and-dollar headwind. In both, the disciplined expression is to buy weakness toward the floor with a defined stop, not to chase the breakout — you are positioning for the catalyst that re-prices a one-sided market, while respecting that momentum can run a little further first. The key difference: wheat has a hard, dated catalyst today in the WASDE; gold’s catalyst is the slower turn in the rate cycle.
Bitcoin and Solana are both bouncing at extreme fear, but the dollar is firm and ETFs are bleeding. How should a trader size the crypto complex around the FOMC?
This is the structural feature that defines the crypto tape right now, and the sequencing has clear implications. Both BTC and SOL are high-beta proxies for global risk appetite, and three forces dominate them more than any coin-specific story: the dollar, real yields, and ETF flows. Bitcoin has reclaimed $60,000 after briefly breaking below it for the first time since 2024, and Solana is steadying near $65.09 at a Fear & Greed reading of 9 — but spot ETFs have bled roughly $4.4bn across major funds over 13 sessions, and a firm dollar plus ~4.55% real-ish yields keep a lid on rebounds. That argues for treating the complex as a single risk position and sizing it down into the 17 June FOMC, which is the binary that can re-price the dollar and yields in one afternoon: a hawkish Powell that lifts the dollar pressures the whole complex, while any dovish tilt is the relief path. Practically, that means three things. First, anchor everything to Bitcoin holding $60,000 — if that line breaks, SOL and the rest of the high-beta tape almost certainly break with it, so it is the master stop. Second, treat Solana’s idiosyncratic catalysts — the Alpenglow upgrade, Firedancer, staking-enabled ETFs, the SIMD-0550 emissions cut — as reasons to accumulate small into weakness, not reasons to oversize, because they do not pay out until the macro turns. Third, keep size small and stops disciplined through the FOMC, and let the dollar/yield reaction, not conviction, decide when to add. The relief bounce is real but conditional — survive the meeting before adding directional risk.

U.S. Session Summary — 11 June 2026

Thursday’s U.S. session is trading three converging facts. The largest IPO in history prices after the bell — SpaceX (SPCX) at a reported $135 for a ~$1.75tn valuation, with a float-scarce, index-flow debut on the Nasdaq tomorrow set against an extreme valuation and an extraordinary Iran headline naming Starlink a military target. Overnight the May CPI split the screen: a three-year-high 4.2% headline driven almost entirely by the war-energy shock, but a soft +0.2% m/m core that handed risk assets a conditional reprieve. And Washington’s renewed strikes on Iran, with a blockaded Strait of Hormuz, keep the war premium live. Into that crosscurrent the S&P 500 rebounds to ~7,325 off Wednesday’s ~950-point Dow rout, the 10-year holds 4.55%, gold sags to a seven-month low near $4,086.80, and crypto steadies with BTC reclaiming $60k near $63,104.

The actionable framework stratifies by conviction and time horizon. Cleanest two-way macro expressions: range-trade USD/CAD in 1.375–1.40, fading the top on the oil bid; and sell USD/CHF into the 0.80 cap on the franc’s safe-haven strength, with 0.8060 the invalidation. Highest-asymmetry contrarian ideas: buy gold dips toward $4,020 on the war/central-bank floor while respecting the rate headwind ($3,860 stop, $4,340 target); and buy wheat dips toward $5.78 into a record spec short and the tightest US crop since 1965, with today’s WASDE the squeeze catalyst.

In equities and the high-beta complex, the S&P 500 leans neutral — buy dips toward 7,180 for the relief bounce, but hedge the Iran and 17 June FOMC binaries that can swing it either way — with tonight’s record SpaceX pricing the headline sentiment swing factor into tomorrow’s Nasdaq debut. In crypto, Bitcoin near $63,104 is a dip-accumulation while $60,000 holds, and Solana near $65.09 is a small-size dip-buy on the Alpenglow/ETF story — both pivoting on the dollar, real yields and the master $60k BTC line. The US 10Y is a 4.45–4.65% range-trade with a mild higher-yield lean on sticky energy inflation. The single most important instruction for the day: treat tonight’s SpaceX pricing and the 17 June FOMC as the key binaries, keep size small across the dollar- and liquidity-linked instruments, favour the contrarian gold and wheat ideas as the higher-asymmetry expressions, and survive the events before adding directional conviction.

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Capital Street FX · U.S. Session Daily Technical Analysis · Thursday, 11 June 2026

This report is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. SpaceX (SPCX) is a pre-listing IPO; figures shown are reported indications and the listing may price, change or be delayed. Trading CFDs involves significant risk of loss. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Risk Disclosure · Privacy Policy

© 2026 Capital Street FX. All market data sourced from live feeds during the U.S. session, 11 June 2026. Levels shown are schematic representations for illustration, not exchange screenshots. Key sources: TheStreet, Yahoo Finance, Schwab, CNBC, Reuters, Bloomberg, TradingEconomics, Investing.com, FXStreet, Barchart, Farm Futures, USDA, J.P. Morgan Research, Morningstar, CoinGecko, OKX, Bybit, Crypto.com, Federal Reserve H.15, Capital.com, TradingKey, CSFX Research Desk.