- Yen surged as the session's top performer — USD/JPY dropped nearly 1% to 161.08 while gold jumped 1.65% to $4,136
- Dollar Index slipped below 101 (-0.51%), giving ground to every G10 currency led by GBP (+0.71%) and CHF (+0.73%)
- Asian session opens with broad dollar weakness and strong safe-haven bid — watch whether USD/JPY holds the 161 handle
Overnight Summary
Safe-haven currencies dominated the overnight session as the dollar slid below the 101 handle on the DXY, closing at 100.9 — down half a percent. The Japanese yen was the clear winner, with USD/JPY falling nearly a full percent to 161.08. The Swiss franc joined the bid, pulling USD/CHF down 0.73% to 0.8028.
Gold’s 1.65% rally to $4,136 reinforced the safe-haven tone, with bullion and yen moving in lockstep. Copper added 0.85%, giving the Aussie and Kiwi a modest tailwind against the greenback, though both still lost ground against the rampaging yen. Oil was a non-event — WTI flat at $68.46, Brent unchanged at $71.54 — leaving the petro-linked currencies to trade on dollar dynamics alone.
Key Pair Breakdown
USD/JPY (161.08, -0.95%): The session’s biggest mover. Nearly a full percent decline puts the pair back below 161.50 resistance-turned-support. The move aligns with gold’s surge — classic safe-haven rotation. The 161 handle is the immediate line in the sand heading into Tokyo. A clean break lower opens the door toward the 160 round number.
CAD/JPY (113.53, -0.81%): Dragged lower by yen strength rather than loonie weakness — USD/CAD was quiet at 1.4181 (-0.17%). The cross is a pure expression of JPY demand. Flat oil gave CAD no independent catalyst to push back against the yen bid.
AUD/JPY (111.50, -0.78%): Despite copper’s 0.85% gain helping AUD/USD grind higher (+0.23%), the Aussie couldn’t outrun yen demand. The cross dropped nearly 0.8% and is now testing the 111.50 zone. A break below 111 would signal the yen bid is overpowering commodity support.
USD/NOK (9.8323, -0.77%): The krone rallied hard despite flat oil prices, suggesting the move was entirely dollar-driven. NOK tracked the broader DXY selloff rather than any energy-specific flow. The pair is pushing toward the 9.80 level.
EUR/JPY (184.18, -0.77%): Euro gained a modest 0.2% against the dollar but still lost 0.77% against the yen — underscoring how one-sided the JPY bid was. The cross is pulling back from recent highs, and 184 is the level to watch.
USD/CHF (0.8028, -0.73%): The franc’s rally mirrored the yen’s. USD/CHF is pressing below 0.8030, and a sustained move under 0.80 would mark a fresh leg lower. EUR/CHF fell 0.52% to 0.9182, confirming the franc gained on its own merit, not just dollar weakness.
GBP/USD (1.3344, +0.71%): Sterling was the top G10 performer against the dollar, pushing through 1.33 to reach 1.3344. The pound also beat the euro, with EUR/GBP sliding 0.54% to 0.8567. GBP/AUD gained 0.46%, showing sterling strength was broad-based, not just a dollar-weakness story.
NZD/USD (0.5706, +0.53%): The Kiwi outpaced the Aussie against the dollar, gaining over half a percent. Copper’s move likely helped both antipodeans, but NZD’s outperformance suggests positioning or rate differential dynamics at play. NZD/JPY still fell 0.41% — even the stronger commodity currencies couldn’t escape the yen tide.
USD/SEK (9.6759, -0.45%): The Swedish krona followed the Scandinavian trend, gaining against a weak dollar. The move was moderate compared to NOK, reflecting SEK’s lower beta to commodity cycles.
Asian Session Setup
Tokyo opens with USD/JPY sitting right on the 161 handle after the sharpest single-session drop in days. Japanese traders will test whether the yen bid has legs or if the move was purely a New York positioning flush ahead of the US holiday weekend. A break below 161 could accelerate stops toward 160.50.
For Sydney, AUD/USD opens above 0.6928 with copper as a tailwind, but AUD/JPY at 111.50 is the tension point — if yen demand continues, the Aussie may struggle to hold gains against the greenback. The DXY below 101 is broadly supportive for Asian FX, reducing pressure on regional currencies.
GBP/USD at 1.3344 and EUR/USD at 1.1436 are both trading near session highs, so any pullback in early Asia could offer clues on whether the dollar sell-off has further to run or is getting stretched.
Bottom Line
The overnight session was a clean safe-haven rotation — yen and franc up, dollar down, gold surging — with sterling the standout performer on the offensive side. USD/JPY at 161 is the pair every desk is watching into Tokyo; how it trades in the first hour will set the tone for Asian FX risk through the session.
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