Recent headlines from the sources AlphaScala monitors. AlphaScala analysis is published in the main market section.
South Korea's M2 growth slowed to 7.2% in March from 8%, cooling demand and reducing BoK hike odds. The data supports a dovish pause, keeping USD/KRW supported.
OECD projects BOJ policy rate to hit 2% by end-2027, sees no urgency to accelerate. Trade reform call frames Trump-Xi summit as insufficient alone.
WTI's break above $99.20 trendline resistance and the 50% Fib sets up a run toward $107.00, impacting commodity FX and the dollar. Next cue: a close above $107 or a drop below $98.50.
OECD sees BoJ rate climbing to 2% by end-2027, driven by a positive wage-price cycle. Spring wage talks now serve as the next concrete test for the yen's path.
The yen stays weak despite a hawkish BoJ because the US-Japan rate gap anchors USD/JPY. US rates at 5.25-5.50% fund the carry trade. Next decision point: the Fed’s June dot plot.
OECD projects BoJ policy rate reaching 2% by end-2027, implying 150bp of tightening. The path would compress US-Japan yield spreads and force a carry trade recalibration.
Chicago Fed's Goolsbee says services inflation is the real worry after April CPI hit 3.8% headline, 2.8% core. Labor market stable, removing urgency to ease.
The Australian dollar climbed toward 0.7250 after the RBA's hawkish commentary shifted rate-cut expectations. The upcoming Trump-Xi summit now poses the next directional risk.
Australia’s Wage Price Index rose 3.3% YoY in Q1, matching forecasts. The print keeps the RBA on hold and caps AUD/USD upside. Next catalyst: RBA minutes.
The dollar index hit its highest level in a week after a strong U.S. inflation print revived Fed tightening fears. Traders now turn to the FOMC minutes for rate clues.
Annual wage growth held at 3.3% for a second straight quarter, reinforcing the RBA's reluctance to cut rates while services inflation remains sticky. The next test for AUD/USD is the US PCE inflation print.
The 10.9 percentage point swing from +7.9% to -3% in Q1 investment lending removes a pillar of domestic demand, raising the probability of an RBA rate cut and pressuring AUD/USD.
The -4.3% quarterly swing in home loans casts doubt on the RBA's ability to hold rates, adding domestic pressure to an already strong US dollar.
Asian currencies slid against the dollar Wednesday after a hot US inflation print and a stalled Iran ceasefire reset the macro outlook. The next test is whether the Fed's hawkish repricing extends.
The Canadian dollar held near 1.3700 after a hot US CPI print boosted the dollar, while crude rallied on Iran tensions. US retail sales data now looms.
New spending capped at NZ$2.1 bln, NZ$300 mln below December plan, signals fiscal restraint that could narrow NZ-US yield spreads. The next budget update will test whether the government can stick to its surplus target amid global uncertainty.
Trump's prioritization of trade over Iran at the Xi summit reduces dollar safe-haven demand, setting up potential rallies in AUD, NZD, and CNH.
Japan's BOP trade surplus swelled to ¥3900B in March from ¥2709B, reinforcing the yen's current-account support and raising the bar for a sustained USD/JPY upside break.
Japan's bank lending accelerated to 5.4% YoY in April, above the 4.6% forecast. The print tightens the yen carry trade as BOJ rate hike odds shift. Next markers: BOJ minutes and US CPI.
The statement raises the probability of a flight to yen and franc, while oil-linked currencies may gain on supply fears. Iran's response is the next catalyst.
Lula scrapped taxes on imports up to $50, reversing an unpopular levy before the October election. The move threatens to widen Brazil's trade deficit and pressure the real.
WTI crude oil rallied after Trump rejected an Iran peace proposal, keeping sanctions tight. Dollar safety bid and EIA inventory report next.
The 0.1pp uptick in April's jobless rate may narrow yield differentials supporting the won, shifting BoK rate-cut expectations. Next BoK decision will test if yield support is peaking.
TD Securities says AI-driven job displacement is not showing up in US data, keeping wage growth sticky and the Fed cautious. That supports the dollar against the euro and sterling.
The kiwi slid after US core CPI beat forecasts, pushing Treasury yields higher. The RBNZ inflation expectations survey is next, with 0.6100 the downside pivot.
Commerzbank notes the Malaysian ringgit’s stable range reflects a growth premium and positive real rates, creating a carry-trade floor. The next test is the upcoming GDP release.
US inflation surprise lifted yields and the dollar, pressuring risk assets. Semiconductors led the equity decline. Upcoming PPI may extend the hawkish repricing.
Natural gas tested the 50-day MA at $2.85, hitting $2.95 before slipping. A close above $2.95 confirms the wedge breakout, targeting $3.27-$3.41.
Standard Chartered flags a slump in European exports to the US and rising tariff risks, threatening EUR/USD support and widening rate differentials.
Commerzbank analysts warn that EU ETS reform will raise carbon costs for aluminium smelters, compressing margins and potentially weighing on the euro via industrial-growth headwinds.