- Swiss franc weakest G10 currency overnight — USD/CHF surged nearly 1% as gold dropped 2.3% and risk appetite shifted toward energy
- Oil exploded higher with WTI +9.2% and Brent +9.4%, supporting CAD relative strength while NOK lagged on broad dollar firmness
- DXY reclaimed 101.3 on a +0.3% session — modest dollar bid across the board, but the real action was CHF liquidation
Overnight Summary
The dollar firmed overnight but the headline story was a wholesale Swiss franc unwind as a massive oil rally reset risk dynamics across G10 FX. DXY edged up 0.3% to 101.3, a clean grind higher rather than a spike — but the franc bore the brunt of the session’s repositioning. USD/CHF ripped nearly 1% to 0.8144, the session’s only move exceeding the 0.8% threshold. Gold dropped 2.3% to $4,009, reinforcing the safe-haven exit, while WTI and Brent crude surged over 9% each — a move large enough to reshape the commodity-FX landscape for the next 24 hours.
Key Pair Breakdown
USD/CHF +0.975% to 0.8144 — The session’s standout. A near-1% move in a major is unusual, and the catalyst picture lines up cleanly: gold sold off 2.3%, oil surged 9%+, and risk appetite rotated hard away from havens. The franc was on the wrong side of every flow. The pair is pressing back toward 0.82 — a level it hasn’t held convincingly in weeks. Follow-through above 0.8180 would confirm the haven-unwind has legs.
EUR/CHF +0.524% to 0.92692 — The franc weakness wasn’t just a dollar story. EUR/CHF pushing above 0.925 with momentum suggests broad CHF selling, not just USD buying. This cross is a cleaner read on franc-specific flows and it’s confirming the same picture: funds are exiting defensive positioning.
GBP/CHF +0.466% to 1.0868 — Sterling joined the anti-franc trade. GBP/CHF climbing while cable itself sold off tells you the CHF leg is doing all the work. The pair is tracking toward 1.09 resistance.
USD/NOK +0.678% to 9.7779 — This is the session’s puzzle. Norway’s krone should benefit from a 9% oil rip, but the dollar bid overwhelmed the commodity tailwind. NOK weakened against the greenback even as Brent surged to $83.18. This divergence suggests the oil move came late in the session or that NOK positioning was already stretched. Watch for a catch-up rally in NOK during Asia and early London.
USD/SEK +0.556% to 9.7131 — SEK tracked NOK lower in a Scandinavian-wide selloff against the dollar. Without the oil anchor NOK has, SEK’s weakness makes more sense. The pair is approaching 9.75, which has acted as a pivot this quarter.
EUR/CAD -0.558% to 1.6106 — The oil move found its clearest expression here. CAD strengthened against the euro as crude surged, while USD/CAD sat nearly flat at 1.4152 (-0.07%). That divergence — CAD holding firm against the dollar while gaining on the euro — is what a proper oil-bid looks like. EUR/CAD below 1.61 opens a path toward 1.60.
GBP/USD -0.463% to 1.3353 — Cable gave back half a cent in a steady grind lower. There was no GBP-specific catalyst; this was dollar bid doing the work. The 1.3350 area has been a pivot — a close below it puts 1.3280 support in play.
GBP/JPY -0.445% to 216.81 — An odd mover given JPY itself was dead flat (USD/JPY +0.05% at 162.44). The GBP/JPY decline was entirely a sterling problem. The pair is pulling back from multi-decade highs and 216 is the first support shelf.
EUR/USD -0.407% to 1.1387 — The euro slipped below 1.14 on the broad dollar bid. The move was orderly, not a breakdown. EUR/USD is still in the upper half of its recent range, but the session put it back below the 1.14 handle that bulls have been defending.
Asian Session Setup
The big question for Sydney and Tokyo is whether oil follow-through continues — because a 9% crude move rarely settles in one session. If WTI holds above $77, expect AUD/USD to find a floor around 0.6900 after overnight weakness (-0.36%). Copper’s modest +0.68% gain wasn’t enough to spark AUD demand overnight, but a second-leg commodity bid during Asian hours could change that.
USD/JPY is the quietest major at 162.44, pinned just below the intervention-watch zone. The gold selloff argues against yen strength, but traders are unlikely to push the pair much higher ahead of potential Japanese official commentary. NZD/USD at 0.5751 is drifting without a catalyst — it needs a clear risk-on or commodity signal to move off the lows.
DXY at 101.3 is a mild headwind for Asian FX. Not aggressive, but steady enough to keep the dollar-positive tone alive through the Tokyo morning.
Bottom Line
Risk appetite is rotating hard — out of gold, out of francs, into energy — and the dollar is riding along for a free carry higher. The one pair every desk is watching into Asia is USD/CHF at 0.8144: a clean break above 0.82 would confirm the haven trade is unwinding, with implications across the entire G10 board.
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