Asia open
US futures kicked off the week on the back foot, with stock-index futures and the dollar both slipping as the Monday session opened to a cocktail of trade deal drama and another Trump-Fed headline flare-up. The dollar got knocked around early, with the euro and Swiss franc showing strength, and the yen punching through to its highest level since September, riding a classic risk-off surge as the tape started digesting weekend noise.
Equity-index futures were flashing red across the board — Nikkei, S&P 500, Nasdaq 100 all pointed lower, and with Australia and Hong Kong still shut for holidays, liquidity was thin, but sentiment was thick with nerves. Treasuries were set to reopen into that edginess — and yields looked like they wanted to leak lower, echoing the global macro chill.
The catalyst? A mix of Japan/EU tariff watch, Powell-bashing, and a long weekend’s worth of overanalyzed soundbites. Trump’s “termination cannot come fast enough” jab at Powell was always going to be the headline darling on a sleepy Monday — and like clockwork, the algos ran with it. Where there’s smoke, there’s a social media firestorm.
But while social media milks the Fed drama, I’m dialed into the Art of the Deal trade flow. Japan’s in play, and South Korea’s creeping higher on deal optimism. But Asia’s mixed, and no walk-back on US-China tariffs means risk appetite is still skating on thin ice.
The Nikkei dropped under the weight of a stronger yen and repatriation whispers — the kind of flow that doesn’t care about policy spin. Meanwhile, South Korea eked out a gain, riding on the back of modest progress chatter and its usual “watch Tokyo, move second” strategy.
We got knocked into a triple-down long EURUSD on the break of 1.1430, but frankly, I’m on the offer (selling half as 1.1500 was my near-term target) — everyone saw the Monday algo-predictable squeeze a mile away. As always, weekend headlines + Powell drama = Monday overreaction. Clean trade, grab the cash, and reassess.
But don’t get me wrong — I still think EURUSD heads to 1.2000. Why? Because hard US data is about to catch up with the soft, and when it does, the Fed’s hand gets forced. Rate cuts won’t be optional — they’ll be necessary. And that likely mutes the Trump vs. Fed independence theatrics, at least for a while. The street can pretend it’s about policy integrity, but if the data turns, the Fed will pivot faster than they’d like to admit.
Keep an eye on China’s loan prime rate decision later today. No one’s expecting fireworks, but any hint of an easing tilt from the PBoC could be the nudge Asia markets need to shake off some of this macro funk. Until then, it’s chop city — headline-sensitive, low-volume, high-noise tape. Trade accordingly.
One thing that’s absolutely clear — and no longer debatable — is that the reputational hit to the U.S. brand is real, and it’s not fading quietly into the next news cycle. It’s sticking. Investors, allies, and even central banks are starting to bake in the idea that American policymaking, both fiscal and monetary, is now a geopolitical variable — not a given.
Gold’s not confused about it either. It’s pricing in the chaos: a weaker dollar, an uncertain macro trajectory, and growing doubt about whether the Federal Reserve can run policy with clean hands for the next three years. We’re entering a stretch where the perception of Fed independence might matter more than the actual policy path.
And look, I’m a Fed supporter — always have been. But this particular Fed has smoked out too many signals, mismanaged the comms game, and let market confidence drift. You can’t be “data-dependent” when you're reacting to headlines and hoping the economy behaves. The market smells that weakness.
I’m not saying burn it down — but a shake-up is overdue, and it needs to come with a more diplomatic wrapper. Restoration, not revolution. Otherwise, the Fed becomes another extension of Washington gridlock — and that’s a risk asset the market doesn’t want to hold.
Oil at the open
Oil caught a cold to start the week — and traders didn’t need much of an excuse to hit the sell button. Crude came off hard as the US-led trade war narrative morphed from background noise into a clear and present demand threat. Brent slipped over 1%, drifting back toward $67, while WTI slid below $64, snapping a two-day bounce and leaving bulls second-guessing their conviction.
The catalyst? A potent mix of geopolitical theater and macro anxiety. On one side, markets are bracing for new data drops that’ll start quantifying just how much damage Trump’s tariff campaign is doing to U.S. economic activity. On the other, Washington and Tehran are back at the table — with Iran’s foreign minister dropping breadcrumbs about a “better understanding” post-Saturday talks. Another round is scheduled for Wednesday in Oman, and if this thaw gains traction, Iranian barrels could reenter the market, adding even more weight to an already supply-heavy setup.
And that’s the real problem. This isn’t just a demand scare — it’s a full-blown double whammy. OPEC+ has already shocked the market by ramping up supply faster than expected, while global macro signals flash “slowdown” in all the wrong places. Traders who once worried about scarcity are now whispering the word glut again — a word that hasn’t been in vogue since the last big crude meltdown.
This month’s oil tape has been ugly — at one point plunging to a four-year low, and the chart’s still bleeding from the bruises. With tariffs ricocheting across the global economy and diplomacy doing its best to drag Iran back into the fold, the path of least resistance looks heavy. Crude bulls will need more than seasonal demand to stop the rot. Right now, sentiment’s in the gutter — and supply, geopolitics, and policy noise are doing nothing to help it climb out.
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