- NZD/USD dropped nearly 1% overnight — the session's standout mover — diverging sharply from a broader commodity rally
- Swiss franc sold off across the board with GBP/CHF, USD/CHF, and EUR/CHF all gaining 0.5–0.7%, unwinding recent safe-haven flows
- DXY flat at 99.2 despite copper surging 2.35% and gold pushing above 4500 — commodity strength failed to translate into FX
Overnight Summary
The dollar index went nowhere overnight, printing 99.2 with a negligible +0.003% change — but underneath that calm surface, two clean themes played out: a broad Swiss franc sell-off and a sharp New Zealand dollar drop that defied a ripping commodity complex.
Commodities had a strong session. Copper jumped 2.35%, gold pushed to 4519 (+0.98%), and WTI crude rallied 1.33% to 93.39. Normally that backdrop lifts the commodity currencies — and AUD did hold flat at 0.71839 — but NZD/USD fell 0.94% to 0.59256, making it the only G10 pair to move more than 80 basis points. The disconnect points to NZD-specific selling rather than a broad risk-off impulse.
The franc weakness was the other defining move. GBP/CHF led with a 0.74% gain, USD/CHF rose 0.63%, and EUR/CHF added 0.50%. With gold bid and equities stable, this looks like positioning cleanup rather than a fundamental shift in safe-haven demand.
Key Pair Breakdown
NZD/USD (0.59256, −0.94%): The session’s biggest mover by a wide margin. NZD broke below 0.595 and is now testing the 0.5925 handle. The sell-off came despite copper’s 2.35% rally — a rare divergence that suggests domestic NZ drivers or positioning unwinds are overriding the commodity tailwind. AUD/NZD will have widened on the back of this; the kiwi is underperforming its Antipodean peer badly.
GBP/CHF (1.0592, +0.74%): The sharpest expression of CHF weakness overnight. Sterling held its ground while the franc gave back ground across all crosses. GBP/CHF is pushing back toward the 1.06 handle — a level it hasn’t held cleanly in recent sessions.
USD/SEK (9.3012, +0.67%): The krona weakened despite a supportive oil backdrop (Brent +0.84%). USD/SEK moving to 9.30 puts it in the upper end of its recent range. This looks like broad Scandinavian underperformance — USD/NOK also firmed (+0.25%) though less aggressively.
NZD/JPY (94.692, −0.63%): A double-down on the NZD weakness story. Even with yen itself softening modestly against the dollar, the kiwi still lost ground against it. NZD/JPY dropping below 95.00 is a clean risk-off signal from the cross.
USD/CHF (0.78676, +0.63%): The dollar didn’t do much against most G10 pairs, but it gained nearly two-thirds of a percent against the franc. USD/CHF is back above 0.7850 and eyeing 0.79. The move confirms this was a CHF story, not a USD story.
EUR/CHF (0.91529, +0.50%): Rounding out the CHF weakness picture. EUR/CHF reclaiming 0.915 after its recent drift lower suggests some short-covering. The SNB’s comfort zone has historically been above 0.92, so there may be further room if the unwind continues.
GBP/JPY (215.22, +0.41%): Sterling edging higher against a softer yen, pushing GBP/JPY above 215. This is more a function of JPY weakness (USD/JPY +0.33%) than GBP strength — cable itself barely moved (+0.11%).
Asian Session Setup
The NZD sell-off puts the Antipodean space in focus for Sydney. AUD/USD held at 0.71839, essentially flat, which means the AUD/NZD spread has widened — watch whether NZD finds a bid near 0.5920 or continues to leak lower. If there’s no bounce early in Asian hours, the next support zone is the 0.5900 round number.
USD/JPY at 159.88 keeps the pair within striking distance of 160.00 — a level that has historically drawn verbal intervention from Japanese officials. Tokyo will be watching that handle closely. The overnight move was modest (+0.33%) but directionally persistent.
DXY flatness removes any strong directional headwind or tailwind for Asian FX. The commodity rally (copper +2.35%) should support AUD if it carries into the Asian session, but NZD has clearly decoupled — the two are trading on different drivers right now.
Bottom Line
The overnight session was about CHF weakness and NZD isolation — not the dollar, which went sideways. The pair most likely to move in Asian hours is NZD/USD, where traders will be testing whether 0.5920–0.5900 holds or the sell-off has further to run.
Read next: FX Markets · How to Read the COT Report · What Is a Bond?
Get early access to Orbit
Orbit is Luna3.ai’s AI-augmented research engine. 12 algorithmic signals + a gradient-boosted ML model + an agentic LLM that reads each top pick’s filings and writes a daily thesis with conviction score and catalyst proximity. Three regimes, three playbooks — growth in expansion, defensives in late-cycle, recovery plays at panic bottoms. The 3 in Luna3.ai.
No spam. Unsubscribe any time.
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!