EUR/USD: Bulls Hold Ground
Current Levels: EUR/USD climbed to 1.0975 in Tuesday’s Asian session, snapping a two-day slide, up 0.3% on USD weakness.Key Drivers: A softer USD, driven by Fed rate cut bets (100 bps by December), supports the pair. Technicals favor bulls above the 200-hour EMA (1.0900), with oscillators signaling upside potential.Outlook: A break above 1.1000 could target 1.1050-1.1100; support at 1.0940, with a drop below 1.0900 risking 1.0800.Context: ECB rate cut expectations temper euro gains.
Japanese Yen: Safe-Haven Bid Persists
Current Levels: USD/JPY dipped to 145, as the JPY retains a bullish bias.Key Drivers: Safe-haven flows amid tariff-led recession fears and BoJ rate hike expectations for 2025 (despite tariff risks to Japan’s economy) bolster the JPY. A weaker USD, pressured by dovish Fed bets, caps USD/JPY upside.Outlook: Support at 145.50; resistance at 151. Modest risk-on recovery may limit JPY gains.
AUD/USD: Rebounds on USD Weakness
Current Levels: AUD/USD rose to 0.605, up 0.4%, recovering from tariff-driven lows.Key Drivers: USD selling and aggressive Fed rate cut bets (65% chance of a May cut) lift the Aussie, despite fears of a U.S. recession. The RBA’s likely 25 bps cut in May (with a 50 bps option) weighs on AUD’s longer-term outlook.Outlook: Resistance at 0.6680; support at 0.5950.
WTI Crude Oil: Modest Recovery
Current Levels: WTI rose to $61.40, up 1.2%, after hitting a 2021 low.Key Drivers: USD weakness aids USD-denominated oil, but tariff-driven recession fears and OPEC+’s 411,000 bpd output hike in May limit upside.Outlook: Resistance at $62.50; support at $60.
Gold: Bounces to $3,000
Current Levels: XAU/USD hit $3,000, up 1.5% from Monday’s $2,956 low.Key Drivers: Safe-haven demand surges as Trump’s tariffs spark trade war fears. Fed rate cut bets weaken the USD, supporting gold, though a slight risk-on recovery caps gains.Outlook: Resistance at $3,020; support at $2,970. FOMC minutes and U.S. CPI data loom large.
Broader Market Context
Trump’s Tariff Threats Intensify: The Wall Street Journal reports Trump is threatening an additional 50% tariff on Chinese imports, escalating the trade war after China’s 34% retaliatory duties. The Financial Times notes Trump’s refusal to pause tariffs for trade talks, signaling no reprieve for markets.
Market Impact: Asian markets slumped—China’s CSI 300 fell 2.5%, Japan’s Nikkei dropped 1.9%. U.S. futures signal a 1.2% lower open, with tech and consumer stocks most at risk.