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Week Ahead: US PCE to Decide USD/JPY’s Path After BoJ Hike, Copper Eyes $6.15 & Hang Seng Tests 23,750 | Technical Analysis – Asia Weekly | 20 June 2026

June 20, 2026
Research Desk
Week Ahead: US PCE to Decide USD/JPY’s Path After BoJ Hike, Copper Eyes $6.15 & Hang Seng Tests 23,750 | Capital Street FX Asia Weekly · 20 June 2026
Asia-Pacific Technical Analysis
Saturday 20 June 2026 · Week of 22 June 2026

Week Ahead: US PCE Thursday to Decide USD/JPY’s Next Move After BoJ Hike, Copper Eyes $6.15 Support & Hang Seng Tests 23,750

USD/JPY 161.28 · NZD/USD 0.5738 · Copper $6.38/lb · Nat Gas $3.19 · Hang Seng 23,851.09 · SOL $70.07 · LTC $44.03
BoJ’s Largest Rate Since 1995 · US PCE Thursday · RBNZ July 8 Decision Looms · Iran Truce Eases Commodity Risk Premium
Capital Street FX Research · 7 instruments covered · BoJ HIKE & US PCE WEEK · For informational purposes only
🗓 Past Week in Review · 16–19 June 2026
Week in Review: BoJ Delivers Historic Hike to 1.0%, Fed Holds Hawkishly, and the Iran Truce Reshapes Risk Sentiment
USD/JPY
161.28
▲ From 160.20 · +0.67% on week
Touched a fresh multi-decade high of 161.82 mid-week before the BoJ’s surprise 25bp hike to 1.0% trimmed gains late Friday.
NZD/USD
0.5738
▼ −1.48% · Two-month low on Fed hawkish hold
Slid from 0.5823 as the Fed’s hawkish hold and soft Q2 growth forecasts outweighed a strong Q1 GDP beat and RBNZ hike odds.
Copper (HG)
$6.38/lb
▼ −2.30% · Eased from $6.53 as Oyu Tolgoi resumed exports
Rio Tinto’s Oyu Tolgoi mine resumed concentrate exports and the Fed’s hawkish hold cooled demand sentiment, though the structural deficit thesis is intact.
Natural Gas
$3.19/MMBtu
▼ −1.44% · EIA injection of 73 Bcf beat expectations
A larger-than-expected 73 Bcf storage build capped gains even as LNG feedgas demand softened on terminal maintenance.
Hang Seng (HSI)
23,851.09
▼ −1.89% · Retraced from monthly high of 26,045
Fell back toward the lower end of its 52-week range as Fed hawkishness and softer regional risk appetite weighed on tech and property names.
Solana (SOL)
$70.07
▲ +4.09% · Rebounded above the $67.32 prior high
Gave back part of the prior week’s Alpenglow-driven recovery as broader risk appetite cooled into the Fed decision.
Litecoin (LTC)
$44.03
▲ +0.37% · Edging above the $40–$44 demand zone
Spot Litecoin ETFs recorded zero net inflows for a 15th straight session, underscoring weak institutional demand even as price holds its demand zone.
The week of 16–19 June 2026 was dominated by two central bank decisions that moved in opposite directions for yen sentiment. The Bank of Japan lifted its policy rate by 25 basis points to 1.0% on Friday — the highest level since September 1995 — in a 7-1 vote, a move policymakers had been building toward as underlying inflation held near target and real rates stayed deeply negative. The hike came too late to prevent USD/JPY printing a fresh high of 161.82 earlier in the week, but it materially changes the policy divergence narrative going into next week. Separately, the Federal Reserve left rates unchanged on Wednesday while signalling growing internal support for additional hikes later this year, a hawkish hold that strengthened the dollar broadly and dragged NZD/USD to a two-month low of 0.5741 despite New Zealand’s Q1 GDP beating expectations at 0.8% quarter-on-quarter. Copper eased from its $6.53 peak after Rio Tinto resumed copper concentrate exports from the Oyu Tolgoi mine in Mongolia following a brief protest-related disruption, removing a near-term supply scare even as Jefferies’ structural deficit forecast of 491,000 tons annually through 2030 remains unchanged. Adding to the risk backdrop, the US and Iran signed an interim agreement intended to lead to the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, which pulled oil prices lower and removed a meaningful share of the geopolitical premium that had supported both energy and industrial metals. Crypto bucked the broader risk-off tone late in the week, with Solana rebounding above its $67.32 prior high to $70.07 even as Litecoin ETFs recorded a fifteenth consecutive session without net inflows, with LTC edging just above the top of CSFX’s $40–$44 demand zone.
📋 This Week at a Glance · 22–26 June 2026
US PCE, BoJ Aftermath, and the Road to RBNZ’s July 8 Decision Define a Pivotal Week for Asia-Pacific
The week of 22–26 June 2026 turns on how markets digest the BoJ’s historic hike alongside Thursday’s US PCE inflation print, the Fed’s preferred gauge. A hot core PCE read would reinforce the Fed’s hawkish hold and keep pressure on NZD/USD and risk assets broadly, while a softer print could accelerate the yen’s recovery now that the BoJ has signalled it is willing to act. The BoJ’s Summary of Opinions and further commentary from Deputy Governor Himino will shape expectations for the pace of further normalisation. On the other side of the Pacific, attention builds toward the RBNZ’s July 8 meeting — already priced at roughly 80% for a 25bp hike — with any governor commentary this week likely to move NZD/USD sharply. Commodities continue to digest the US-Iran truce, with the EIA’s Thursday storage report the key swing factor for natural gas, while copper’s structural deficit thesis faces its first real test now that the Oyu Tolgoi supply scare has passed.
🏦 BoJ Summary of Opinions Tuesday 🇺🇸 US Core PCE Thursday 🥝 RBNZ July 8 Guidance Watch ⚡ EIA Gas Storage Thursday 🛢️ Strait of Hormuz Reopening ₿ LTC ETF Flow Watch
Section 1 · Weekly Overview
The Asian session enters the week of 22 June with USD/JPY at 161.28, still digesting Friday’s surprise Bank of Japan rate hike to 1.0% — the highest level since September 1995 — after the pair touched a fresh multi-decade high of 161.82 earlier in the week. NZD/USD sits at 0.5738, its weakest level in two months, after the Federal Reserve’s hawkish hold overshadowed a strong New Zealand GDP print.

USD/JPY at 161.28 enters the week with a genuinely two-sided setup for the first time in months. The pair’s advance to 161.82 mid-week reflected continued dollar strength and a still-wide policy gap with Japan, but the BoJ’s 7-1 vote to hike to 1.0% on Friday is the clearest signal yet that the central bank is willing to act against yen weakness rather than simply jawbone about it. Japan’s real interest rates remain deeply negative even after the hike, so CSFX does not see this as an immediate trend reversal — but it does materially raise the bar for USD/JPY to sustain a push back above 162.00, and it raises the odds that the BoJ follows up with further tightening if Thursday’s US PCE print runs hot and keeps the pair elevated.

NZD/USD at 0.5738 has fallen to its lowest level in two months despite New Zealand’s economy growing 0.8% quarter-on-quarter in Q1 — comfortably ahead of the RBNZ’s own 1.0% annual forecast pace and market expectations. The disconnect is straightforward: the Fed’s hawkish hold on Wednesday strengthened the dollar broadly just as forecasters began flagging a likely Q2 slowdown or contraction in New Zealand as the Middle East-driven energy shock works through consumer spending. Markets still assign roughly 80% probability to a 25bp RBNZ hike at the July 8 meeting, which keeps a structural floor under the kiwi even as near-term price action stays defensive.

In commodities, Copper at $6.38/lb has eased from its $6.53 peak after Rio Tinto’s Oyu Tolgoi mine resumed copper concentrate exports following a brief protest-related stoppage, removing a near-term supply risk that had been supporting prices. Jefferies’ structural forecast of a 491,000-ton average annual supply deficit through 2030 is unchanged, keeping CSFX’s dip-buying framework intact. Natural gas at $3.19/MMBtu is digesting a larger-than-expected 73 Bcf storage injection alongside softer LNG feedgas demand from terminal maintenance — Thursday’s next EIA report is the key swing factor. The Hang Seng at 23,851.09 has retraced sharply from its monthly high of 26,045 as Fed hawkishness and the broader pullback in risk appetite weighed on regional equities, though the US-Iran truce and prospective Strait of Hormuz reopening remain a longer-term tailwind for Asian trade-sensitive names. In crypto, Solana at $70.07 has rebounded above its $67.32 prior high even as broader risk appetite cooled into the Fed decision, while Litecoin at $44.03 has edged just above CSFX’s $40–$44 demand zone even as spot ETFs recorded zero net inflows for a fifteenth consecutive session — a sign that any recovery here will need to be patient and accumulation-driven rather than momentum-driven.

USD/JPY
161.28
▲ +0.69% wk · BoJ hiked to 1.0% Friday
52w range: 142.68–161.82 · Touched 161.82 mid-week high
NZD/USD
0.5738
▼ −1.39% · Fed hawkish hold offsets GDP beat
52w range: 0.5580–0.6122 · Two-month low
Copper (HG)
$6.38/lb
▼ −3.22% · Oyu Tolgoi exports resumed
Jefferies: 491k-ton avg deficit/yr to 2030
Natural Gas
$3.19
▼ −0.82% · 73 Bcf injection beat estimates
MMBtu · EIA storage Thursday key signal
Hang Seng (HSI)
23,851.09
▼ −1.59% · Retraced from 26,045 monthly high
52w range: 23,185–28,056 · Testing range lows
Solana (SOL)
$70.07
▼ −2.85% · Cooled into the Fed decision
Watching $58 structural support on weakness
Litecoin (LTC)
$44.03
▼ −0.46% · Holding $40–$44 demand zone
Spot ETFs: zero inflows for 15 sessions
Section 2 · Macro Themes

Three Forces Shaping the Asian Session

The dominant narratives for the week of 22–26 June 2026 across FX, commodities, equities, and digital assets

🏦
BoJ’s Historic Hike to 1.0% Reframes the Yen Outlook — But the Bar for Follow-Through Is High
The Bank of Japan’s 7-1 vote to lift its policy rate to 1.0% — the highest since September 1995 — is the clearest evidence yet that policymakers are willing to act against sustained yen weakness rather than rely on verbal intervention alone. Real rates in Japan remain deeply negative even after the move, so CSFX does not expect an immediate trend reversal in USD/JPY. The key question for this week is whether the BoJ’s Summary of Opinions and Deputy Governor Himino’s commentary signal a faster follow-up pace. A hawkish tone would cap USD/JPY’s recovery attempts toward 162.00 and open a path back toward 158.00–159.00; a more measured tone keeps the pair rangebound just below its multi-decade high.
🛢️
Iran Truce and Strait of Hormuz Reopening Ease the Commodity Risk Premium
The interim US-Iran agreement aimed at reopening the Strait of Hormuz has pulled a meaningful geopolitical risk premium out of both energy and industrial metals. Copper’s pullback from $6.53 to $6.38 reflects this alongside the resumption of Oyu Tolgoi exports, but Jefferies’ structural deficit forecast of 491,000 tons annually through 2030 is unchanged — CSFX still views dips toward $6.00–$6.15 as accumulation opportunities rather than a trend change. Natural gas faces a similar dynamic: easing geopolitical premium and a bullish 73 Bcf storage injection are pulling in opposite directions, leaving Thursday’s EIA report as the decisive catalyst for the week.
Crypto Markets Cool as Risk Appetite Pulls Back Into the Fed Decision
Solana and Litecoin diverged from the broader Fed-driven risk-off tone late in the week. Solana’s rebound from $67.32 to $70.07 puts the pair closer to CSFX’s $76.00 take-profit zone, with the $58 structural support level now a more conditional level to watch should sentiment reverse, while the Alpenglow upgrade narrative remains intact as a medium-term catalyst. Litecoin’s continued fifteen-session ETF inflow drought is the more concerning signal — institutional demand has not yet returned even as price edges just above the top of its $40–$44 demand zone, meaning the move above $44 is more likely to be a retail-driven relief move than confirmation of a sustained breakout.

Section 3 · Trade Setups

Asia-Pacific Weekly Trade Ideas

Seven instrument-specific setups with entry, stop, and target levels for the week of 22–26 June 2026. All levels for reference only; not financial advice. Visit capitalstreetfx.com for live signals.

USD/JPY
161.28
▲ +0.67% wk · BoJ hike to 1.0% caps the multi-decade high at 161.82
▼ SHORT / FADE RALLIES
Entry (Short)
161.80
Stop Loss
163.00
Take Profit
158.20

Thesis — BoJ’s Surprise Hike to 1.0% Raises the Bar for a Fresh Push Above 162.00

USD/JPY’s advance to a fresh multi-decade high of 161.82 this week happened just before the Bank of Japan’s 7-1 vote to lift its policy rate to 1.0% — the highest since September 1995. While real rates in Japan remain deeply negative, the hike is a credible signal that policymakers are now willing to act rather than simply talk about intervention. CSFX believes this materially raises the difficulty of a sustained break above 162.00 this week, even with the Fed in a hawkish hold posture.

For the week of 22–26 June, CSFX’s framework is a short entry at 161.80 — close to the recent high — with a stop at 163.00 to protect against a scenario where a hot US core PCE print on Thursday reignites dollar strength faster than yen buying can offset. The take profit at 158.20 targets the lower end of the recent range. The BoJ’s Summary of Opinions on Tuesday and any further commentary from Deputy Governor Himino are the key intra-week catalysts; a hawkish tone accelerates the move toward target, while a measured tone keeps the pair rangebound and argues for reduced size.

Technical Level Map
USD/JPY
USD/JPY · W1 · Fibonacci + MA · Weekly · CSFX-Research
USD/JPY weekly chart
NZD/USD
0.5738
▼ −1.48% wk · Two-month low despite a strong GDP beat
◆ ACCUMULATE ON WEAKNESS
Entry (Long)
0.5680
Stop Loss
0.5590
Take Profit
0.5880

Thesis — Fed Hawkish Hold Overshadows a Strong NZ GDP Beat; RBNZ’s July 8 Hike Odds Remain the Structural Floor

NZD/USD’s slide to a two-month low of 0.5738 looks disconnected from New Zealand’s underlying data: Q1 GDP grew 0.8% quarter-on-quarter, comfortably ahead of the RBNZ’s own forecast pace. The driver is almost entirely external — the Fed’s hawkish hold on Wednesday strengthened the dollar broadly, and forecasters are now flagging a probable Q2 slowdown in New Zealand as the Middle East energy shock filters through to consumer spending. Markets still assign roughly 80% probability to a 25bp RBNZ hike on July 8, which keeps a credible structural floor under the kiwi even as near-term momentum stays negative.

CSFX’s framework for the week of 22–26 June is a long entry at 0.5680 — a level that would represent a further retracement toward the lower end of the recent range — with a stop at 0.5590 to protect against a scenario where Thursday’s hot US PCE print extends broad dollar strength. The take profit at 0.5880 targets the resistance zone that capped the pair before this week’s Fed-driven slide. This is a patience-first setup: CSFX does not recommend chasing NZD/USD lower without a defined entry, given the structural RBNZ tailwind still in place for July.

Technical Level Map
NZD/USD
NZD/USD · W1 · Fibonacci + MA · Weekly · CSFX-Research
NZD/USD weekly chart
Copper (HG)
$6.38/lb
▼ −2.30% wk · Eased from $6.53 as Oyu Tolgoi resumed exports
▲ LONG / ACCUMULATE
Entry (Long)
$6.15
Stop Loss
$5.95
Take Profit
$6.55

Thesis — Oyu Tolgoi Resumption Removes a Near-Term Scare; the Structural Deficit Case Is Unchanged

Copper’s pullback from $6.53 to $6.38 this week was driven almost entirely by the resumption of concentrate exports from Rio Tinto’s Oyu Tolgoi mine following a brief protest-related disruption, combined with the Fed’s hawkish hold cooling broader demand sentiment. Neither development changes Jefferies’ structural forecast of a 491,000-ton average annual supply deficit through 2030, which remains the anchor for CSFX’s medium-term bullish view. The reopening of the Strait of Hormuz under the US-Iran truce is a modest near-term negative for the risk premium embedded in industrial metals, but it does not address the underlying electrification-driven demand growth that supports copper over a multi-year horizon.

For the week of 22–26 June, CSFX’s framework is a long entry at $6.15 — a level that would represent a further pullback toward the recent range lows — with a stop at $5.95 to protect against a scenario where US core PCE data on Thursday reinforces a more hawkish Fed path and triggers broader commodity liquidation. The take profit at $6.55 targets a retest of this month’s highs. A sustained close below $5.80 would be the level that invalidates this near-term bullish thesis and argues for stepping aside.

Technical Level Map
Copper
Copper (HG) · W1 · Fibonacci + MA · Weekly · CSFX-Research
Copper (HG) weekly chart
Natural Gas
$3.19/MMBtu
▼ −1.44% wk · Bullish storage build caps a soft week
◆ RANGE TRADE / WAIT FOR EIA
Entry (Long)
$3.00
Stop Loss
$2.85
Take Profit
$3.40

Thesis — Bullish Storage Data Meets a Fading Geopolitical Premium; Thursday’s EIA Report Is the Swing Factor

Natural gas at $3.19/MMBtu is being pulled in two directions: last week’s 73 Bcf storage injection beat expectations and reflected strong cooling demand, which is constructive for prices into peak summer, while the easing of the Iran-related risk premium following the US-Iran truce and softer LNG feedgas demand from terminal maintenance are working against it. CSFX views this as a genuine two-way setup rather than a clear directional trade until Thursday’s EIA report clarifies which force is dominant.

For the week of 22–26 June, CSFX’s framework is a conditional long entry at $3.00 — a level that would represent a pullback toward the lower end of the recent range — with a stop at $2.85 and a take profit at $3.40 targeting a return toward this month’s highs. If Thursday’s storage report shows another larger-than-expected injection, CSFX would lower conviction on this setup and wait for a deeper pullback toward $2.85–$2.90 before re-engaging.

Technical Level Map
Natural Gas
Natural Gas · W1 · Fibonacci + MA · Weekly · CSFX-Research
Natural Gas weekly chart
Hang Seng (HSI)
23,851.09
▼ −1.89% wk · Retraced from 26,045 monthly high
◆ AWAIT CONFIRMATION AT SUPPORT
Entry (Long)
23,750
Stop Loss
22,600
Take Profit
25,800

Thesis — Fed Hawkishness Drives a Sharp Pullback; the Iran Truce Remains a Longer-Term Tailwind

The Hang Seng’s retreat from its monthly high of 26,045 to 23,851.09 reflects the broader pullback in risk appetite that followed the Fed’s hawkish hold, with technology and property names leading the decline. CSFX views this as a sentiment-driven retracement rather than a fundamental deterioration — the US-Iran truce and prospective Strait of Hormuz reopening remain constructive for Asian trade and energy-import costs over a multi-month horizon, even if near-term price action is defensive.

For the week of 22–26 June, CSFX does not recommend chasing the index lower without a defined level. The framework is a long entry at 23,750 — close to the lower end of the 52-week range — with a stop at 22,600 to protect against a scenario where Thursday’s US PCE print reinforces a more hawkish Fed path and triggers further global equity de-risking. The take profit at 25,800 targets a retracement back toward the upper-middle of the recent range. If the index holds above 23,700 without testing the entry level, CSFX would wait for the next pullback rather than chase strength.

Technical Level Map
Hang Seng
Hang Seng (HSI) · W1 · Fibonacci + MA · Weekly · CSFX-Research
Hang Seng (HSI) weekly chart
Solana (SOL)
$70.07
▲ +4.09% wk · Rebounded sharply into the Fed decision
▲ LONG / ACCUMULATE ON DIPS
Entry (Long)
$58.00
Stop Loss
$51.50
Take Profit
$76.00

Thesis — Risk-Off Pullback Brings SOL Back Toward Structural Support; Alpenglow Narrative Still Intact

Solana’s rebound from $67.32 to $70.07 reflects a recovery in risk appetite into the Fed decision rather than any deterioration in the underlying network narrative. The Alpenglow consensus protocol upgrade — replacing Proof of History and TowerBFT with sub-150-millisecond finality — remains on track for a late-2026 mainnet rollout and continues to draw institutional attention as price pushes back toward the recent high.

For the week of 22–26 June, CSFX’s framework keeps a long entry at $58.00 — the structural support zone — as the conditional level should sentiment reverse, with a stop at $51.50 protecting against a hawkish US PCE print on Thursday triggering a broader risk-off move across crypto. The take profit at $76.00 is now within closer range given the rebound to $70.07; CSFX would consider scaling in on strength above $68.00 with a tighter proportional stop rather than waiting for a pullback that may not materialise.

Technical Level Map
Solana
Solana (SOL) · W1 · Fibonacci + MA · Weekly · CSFX-Research
Solana (SOL) weekly chart
Litecoin (LTC)
$44.03
▲ +0.37% wk · ETF inflows flat for a 15th session, price edges above $44
◆ PATIENT ACCUMULATION
Entry (Long)
$41.00
Stop Loss
$36.50
Take Profit
$50.00

Thesis — Price Holds the Demand Zone but Institutional Demand Has Not Returned

Litecoin at $44.03 has edged just above the top of CSFX’s $40–$44 demand zone, but the fifteenth consecutive session of zero net inflows into spot LTC ETFs is a signal that this move is being driven by retail positioning rather than institutional accumulation. CSFX’s base case is that LTC needs either a broader crypto risk-on catalyst or a genuine return of ETF inflows before a sustained move above $44 is credible — until then, the setup favours patient, well-defined accumulation rather than chasing the breakout.

For the week of 22–26 June, CSFX’s framework is a long entry at $41.00 — toward the lower end of the demand zone, should price retrace back into it — with a stop at $36.50 to protect against a breakdown of this multi-month support if Thursday’s US PCE print triggers a broader crypto risk-off move. The take profit at $50.00 targets the upper resistance band identified by current technical forecasts. A sustained close above $44.50 on rising volume, rather than the current marginal breakout, would be the stronger signal that the demand zone has resolved higher.

Technical Level Map
Litecoin
Litecoin (LTC) · W1 · Fibonacci + MA · Weekly · CSFX-Research
Litecoin (LTC) weekly chart

Section 4 · Key Catalysts

Events That Will Move Asian Markets

Ranked by anticipated market impact for the week of 22–26 June 2026

US Core PCE Inflation (May) · Thursday
MACRO
The Fed’s preferred inflation gauge is the single most important release of the week. Economists expect core PCE to remain elevated on energy-related pass-through from the Middle East shock. A hot print reinforces the Fed’s hawkish hold and keeps pressure on NZD/USD and risk assets broadly; a softer print would give the yen room to extend its post-BoJ recovery and ease pressure on equities and crypto.
BoJ Summary of Opinions & Himino Commentary · Tuesday
CENTRAL BANK
Following Friday’s surprise 25bp hike to 1.0%, the BoJ’s Summary of Opinions and any further remarks from Deputy Governor Himino will be parsed closely for signals on the pace of further normalisation. A hawkish tone accelerates yen strength and pressures USD/JPY back toward 158.00–159.00; a more measured tone keeps the pair rangebound just below its multi-decade high.
RBNZ July 8 Hike Guidance · Week of 22 June
CENTRAL BANK
With markets pricing roughly 80% probability of a 25bp hike at the July 8 meeting, any RBNZ commentary this week reaffirming that trajectory would put a floor under NZD/USD even amid broader dollar strength. Conversely, any signal that the bank is reconsidering given softer Q2 growth forecasts would remove the structural support that has kept the kiwi from falling further.
EIA Natural Gas Storage Report · Thursday
MACRO
After last week’s larger-than-expected 73 Bcf injection, this week’s storage data is the key swing factor for natural gas direction. Another bullish surprise would extend the build toward the five-year average and cap prices near $3.00; a smaller-than-expected injection would support a recovery back toward $3.40–$3.50 as summer cooling demand ramps up.
Strait of Hormuz Reopening Logistics · Ongoing
GEOPOLITICAL
Following the interim US-Iran agreement, markets are watching for confirmation that shipping traffic through the Strait of Hormuz has normalised. A smooth reopening would extend the unwind of the geopolitical risk premium across oil, copper, and natural gas; any disruption or delay would quickly reverse this week’s commodity softness and reintroduce a safe-haven bid for the yen.
Spot Litecoin & Solana ETF Flow Data · Daily
CRYPTO
Litecoin’s fifteen-session inflow drought is the clearest signal that institutional demand has not returned to crypto markets even as prices hold key technical levels. A reversal — even a modest single day of net inflows — would be a meaningful signal for a sustained LTC recovery above $44; continued flat flows would argue for a more cautious, patient accumulation approach rather than a momentum trade.

Section 5 · Risk Sentiment

Asia-Pacific Risk Meter

CSFX’s qualitative read on regional risk appetite for the week of 22–26 June 2026

Current Reading: Cautious / Two-Way
Risk-OffNeutralRisk-On

Sentiment has shifted toward caution this week as the Fed’s hawkish hold offsets the longer-term constructive signal from the Iran truce. CSFX expects Thursday’s US PCE print to be the decisive swing factor — a soft reading would quickly tip sentiment back toward risk-on across regional equities and crypto, while a hot reading would extend the defensive tone into the following week.


Section 6 · Economic Calendar

Week Ahead — Key Releases for Asia-Pacific Traders

All times in Singapore Time (SGT) unless noted. Forecasts are consensus estimates as of 20 June 2026.

DayTimeEventImpactForecastCSFX Note
Monday, 22 June
Mon 09:30 SGT BoJ Deputy Governor Himino Speech MED First public remarks after Friday’s hike. Any hint at near-term follow-through would extend yen strength; a measured tone keeps USD/JPY rangebound near 161.00.
Mon No major data LOW Quiet start to the week; positioning ahead of Tuesday’s BoJ Summary of Opinions.
Tuesday, 23 June
Tue 07:50 SGT BoJ Summary of Opinions (June Meeting) HIGH The key read on the internal debate behind Friday’s 7-1 vote. A clear signal of further near-term hikes would push USD/JPY toward 159.50; a split or cautious tone keeps the pair closer to 161.00–161.80.
Tue 14:00 SGT Eurozone Consumer Confidence (Flash, June) LOW −14.5 Limited direct Asia impact; relevant mainly for broader global risk tone heading into Thursday’s PCE.
Wednesday, 24 June
Wed 07:30 SGT Japan au Jibun Bank Flash PMIs (June) MED Mfg 50.0 / Svcs 51.5 First post-hike activity read for Japan. A resilient services print supports the BoJ’s case for further tightening and adds to yen-bullish momentum.
Wed 21:30 SGT US Durable Goods Orders (May) MED +0.3% m/m Secondary input ahead of Thursday’s PCE; a strong beat would reinforce the Fed’s hawkish hold narrative and add to dollar strength.
Thursday, 25 June
Thu 20:30 SGT US Core PCE Price Index (May) HIGH +0.3% m/m / 3.4% y/y The single most important release of the week. A hot print extends the Fed’s hawkish hold and pressures NZD/USD and risk assets; a soft print accelerates the post-BoJ yen recovery and supports a broader risk-on tone into Friday.
Thu 22:30 SGT EIA Natural Gas Storage Report HIGH +68 Bcf Decisive catalyst for natural gas direction. A larger-than-expected build caps prices near $3.00; a smaller build supports a recovery toward $3.40–$3.50.
Thu 02:00 SGT (Fri) US Initial Jobless Claims MED 235K Secondary labour-market gauge; a sharp deterioration would complicate the Fed’s hawkish hold narrative even amid sticky inflation.
Friday, 26 June
Fri 07:50 SGT Japan Tokyo CPI (June) HIGH 2.6% y/y Leading indicator for nationwide inflation and the BoJ’s next move. A print above 2.7% would reinforce expectations for further hikes later this year and extend yen strength into the weekend.
Fri 14:00 SGT Eurozone & UK Flash PMIs (June) MED Mixed Global growth pulse ahead of the weekend. Weak prints would extend the cautious risk tone into next week’s open for Asian equities.

Section 7 · FAQ

Asian Markets — Trader Questions Answered

Key questions from CSFX clients ahead of the BoJ’s historic hike, US PCE, and the RBNZ’s July 8 decision

The BoJ just hiked rates to 1.0% — does this mean USD/JPY is about to turn lower?
Not immediately, in CSFX’s view. The hike to 1.0% is the highest level since September 1995, but Japan’s real interest rates remain deeply negative even after the move, and the policy gap with the United States is still substantial. What has changed is the credibility of the BoJ’s willingness to act — a 7-1 vote is a strong internal consensus, not a token gesture. CSFX’s framework treats this as a reason to fade rallies toward 161.80–162.00 rather than as a signal to short the pair outright at current levels. The decisive test will be the BoJ’s Summary of Opinions on Tuesday and Thursday’s US PCE print — if both point toward a faster BoJ pace and a softer Fed path, USD/JPY’s path of least resistance shifts meaningfully lower over the following weeks.
NZD/USD fell to a two-month low even though New Zealand’s GDP beat expectations — why?
The disconnect is almost entirely about the US dollar side of the pair rather than New Zealand’s fundamentals. The Fed’s hawkish hold on Wednesday strengthened the dollar broadly against every major currency, not just the kiwi. At the same time, forecasters are flagging that New Zealand’s strong Q1 number may not be repeated in Q2 as the Middle East-driven energy shock filters through to consumer spending, which has tempered enthusiasm about the GDP beat. CSFX’s view is that the RBNZ’s roughly 80%-priced July 8 hike still provides a credible structural floor under NZD/USD, but the pair needs either a softer US PCE print or clearer RBNZ guidance this week to find that floor in practice rather than in theory.
Copper fell after Oyu Tolgoi resumed exports — is the structural bull case now in doubt?
CSFX does not believe so. The Oyu Tolgoi disruption was always a near-term, event-driven supply risk rather than a structural factor, and its resolution simply removes that temporary premium from the price. Jefferies’ forecast of a 491,000-ton average annual supply deficit through 2030 — driven by electrification demand and slower mine recovery more broadly — is unchanged by this week’s news. CSFX’s framework treats the pullback to $6.38, and any further dip toward $6.15 or $6.00, as accumulation opportunities within an intact structural uptrend, with a sustained close below $5.80 as the level that would call this thesis into question.
The Hang Seng pulled back sharply — should I wait for a deeper correction before buying?
CSFX’s framework is to wait for a defined support level rather than guess at how deep the correction goes. The index’s slide from 26,045 to 23,851.09 tracks the broader Fed-driven pullback in global risk appetite rather than any new Hong Kong or China-specific deterioration, and the longer-term tailwind from the US-Iran truce and Strait of Hormuz reopening remains intact. CSFX’s preferred entry is 23,750, near the lower end of the 52-week range, with a stop at 22,600 to protect against a scenario where Thursday’s US PCE print extends the global risk-off move. Buying without a defined level here risks being caught in a deeper correction if US data disappoints.
Litecoin’s ETFs have seen zero inflows for fifteen sessions — is the $40–$44 demand zone still credible?
CSFX views the demand zone as technically credible but fragile without a catalyst. Price has now edged just above $44 to $44.03 even through the inflow drought, which suggests sellers are not aggressively pressing the level, but the lack of institutional buying means this marginal breakout has less of a buffer than during periods of active ETF accumulation — and could just as easily fade back into the zone. CSFX’s framework is patient accumulation at $41.00 with a firm stop at $36.50 should price retrace, rather than treating the current move above $44 as confirmation that a sustained rally is imminent. A genuine reversal in ETF flow data, even a single day of net inflows, would be the strongest signal that institutional demand is returning and that the breakout can hold above $44.

CSFX View: Asia-Pacific Navigates the Aftermath of a Historic BoJ Hike as US PCE Looms Thursday

The week of 22–26 June 2026 is defined by how markets digest two central bank decisions that pulled USD/JPY in opposite directions and set up a genuinely two-sided week. The Bank of Japan’s surprise 25bp hike to 1.0% — its highest level since September 1995 — came on a strong 7-1 vote and is a credible signal that policymakers are willing to act against yen weakness, even though real rates remain deeply negative. The Federal Reserve’s hawkish hold the same week kept the dollar broadly supported and dragged NZD/USD to a two-month low despite a strong New Zealand GDP beat. Thursday’s US core PCE print is the decisive swing factor for the week: a hot reading extends the Fed’s hawkish hold and keeps pressure on the kiwi and regional risk assets, while a soft reading would accelerate the yen’s post-BoJ recovery and support a broader risk-on tone into the weekend.

In commodities, copper’s pullback to $6.38 after Oyu Tolgoi’s export resumption is a near-term supply story, not a change to Jefferies’ structural 491,000-ton annual deficit forecast through 2030, and CSFX continues to view dips toward $6.15–$6.00 as accumulation opportunities. Natural gas at $3.19 sits between a bullish storage build and a fading geopolitical premium from the US-Iran truce, leaving Thursday’s EIA report as the decisive catalyst. The Hang Seng’s retreat to 23,851.09 reflects the broader Fed-driven risk-off move rather than any regional deterioration, with the Strait of Hormuz reopening a constructive longer-term backdrop once near-term volatility settles.

CSFX’s highest-conviction setups for the week are: a USD/JPY short fade at 161.80 (BoJ credibility vs Fed hawkishness), a Copper long at $6.15 (structural deficit entry on the Oyu Tolgoi-driven dip), and a Solana scale-in above $68.00 toward $76.00 (rebound from $67.32 keeps the structural breakout case intact). NZD/USD needs confirmation at 0.5680 before adding, given the still-credible RBNZ July 8 hike floor, while Litecoin’s marginal push above $44 needs confirmation from returning ETF inflows before CSFX treats it as more than a retail-driven move. CSFX will issue intra-week alerts if Thursday’s US PCE print delivers a material surprise in either direction, if the BoJ’s Summary of Opinions signals a faster hiking pace, or if Strait of Hormuz shipping activity shows signs of disruption. Follow all updates at capitalstreetfx.com.

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