DAILY REPORT - JULY 15 , 2020

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Dow futures were trading at 26782.50 while Nasdaq 100 and S&P 500 futures inched up to 10,706.50 and 3210.12 respectively, at the time of writing.

On the earnings front, Bank of NY Mellon and Goldman Sachs Group Inc are scheduled to report their quarterly results before the market opens on Wednesday.

On the economic front, Canada will report the Core CPI (MoM) for June on Wednesday. The CPI reports the change in consumer prices for goods and services, serving as a key indicator of the underlying strength in consumer demand, helping policy makers decide on future monetary policy. The previous index reading stood at -0.1%.

European equities were trading in negative territory. In the Cash Markets, the CAC 40 was trading at 5007.46 while the DAX inched down 0.80% to 12697.36, at the time of writing.

On the data front, the UK reported its Consumer Price Index (YoY) for June on Wednesday. The change in the price of goods and services, as reported by the index reading stood at 0.6%, beating the consensus estimates at 0.4%.

Asia-Pacific markets were trading in a mixed territory in the cash markets on Wednesday. The ASX 200 rose 1.88% and was trading at 6052.90. The Shanghai Composite declined 1.54% to 3362.09 and Nikkei 225 inched up 1.59% to 22,945.94, at the time of writing.

On the data front, China will report Q2 GDP numbers on Wednesday. The total annualized change In the inflation adjusted value of goods and services produced in china is expected to come in at 2.5%.

US Dollar Index futures inched down 0.12% to 96.090 and British Pound futures rose 0.31% to 1.2600, at the time of writing. The US Dollar Index futures were down on Wednesday as investors continued the previous session’s retreat from the safe-haven asset as data released on Tuesday indicated increased U.S. inflation.

In the Commodity Markets, Silver rose by 0.78% to 19.683 and Gold inched down 0.15% to 1810.70 at the time of writing. Brent oil prices rose to 43.09 at the time of writing. Weak global demand continues to pressure prices as a rapid resurgence in covid-19 cases keeps people indoors and large sections of the economy remain shut.

In the Cryptocurrency Markets, Bitcoin and Ethereum rose to 9,225.2 and 239.44 respectively at the time of writing. In news related to the cryptocurrency markets, Digital asset data firm Brave New Coin (BNC) has inked a multi-year deal with the Toronto Futures Options Swaps Exchange (TFOSE) to power its crypto options trading. BNC’s data will enable the new Canadian derivatives exchange and clearinghouse to offer cash-settled crypto derivatives to global clients.





TECHNICAL SUMMARY


EUR/USD
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EUR/USD D1
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TRADE SUGGESTION- BUY AT 1.14300, TAKE PROFIT AT 1.14935 AND STOP AT 1.13800







USD/JPY
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USD/JPY D1
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TRADE SUGGESTION –SHORT SELL AT 106.978, TAKE PROFIT AT 106.400 AND STOP AT 107.300







EUR/JPY
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EUR/JPY D1
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TRADE SUGGESTION- BUY AT 122.398, TAKE PROFIT AT 123.000 AND STOP AT 122.000









AUD/USD
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AUD/USD D1
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TRADE SUGGESTION- BUY AT 0.70071, TAKE PROFIT AT 0.70250 AND STOP AT 0.69900









NATURAL GAS
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NATURAL GAS
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TRADE SUGGESTION- BUY AT 1.750, TAKE PROFIT AT 1.850 AND STOP AT 1.700









GOLD
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GOLD D1
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TRADE SUGGESTION- BUY AT 1813.28, TAKE PROFIT AT 1830.20 AND STOP AT 1802.40









NASDAQ 100

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NASDAQ 100 D1
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TRADE SUGGESTION- BUY AT 10695.90, TAKE PROFIT AT 11000 AND STOP AT 10500.

 
Hello Traders,

First of all, a sincere thank you to everyone who has followed, read, and engaged with our posts over time. We genuinely appreciate the support and interactions from this community.

We’ve been away from posting for the past few months due to a very busy schedule and extensive research work behind the scenes. During this period, we focused more on refining our market research, analytical frameworks, and trading insights rather than posting frequently.

Starting today, we are reconnecting with the community and will once again begin sharing trading discussions, market perspectives, macro insights, technical analysis, risk management concepts, and deeper research-driven topics across Forex, Gold, Indices, Commodities, and broader financial markets.

Our goal remains the same — to contribute meaningful, thoughtful, and high-quality discussions that serious traders can genuinely benefit from.

Thank you once again for the continued support, and we look forward to engaging with all of you again.

Wishing everyone disciplined trading and consistent growth ahead.
 
WHEN EMPIRES BARGAIN: 200 YEARS OF TARIFFS, POWER AND MARKETS — AND WHAT THE TRUMP-XI SUMMIT ON MAY 14 MEANS FOR EVERY MAJOR PAIR YOU TRADE
Published: May 11, 2026
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Source: Capital Street FX Research Desk




THE SETUP

On May 14, Donald Trump lands in Beijing for the first US presidential visit to China in nearly eight years. He will sit across from Xi Jinping in the Great Hall of the People while financial markets hold their breath. This is not a routine diplomatic event. It is the culmination of a trade war that has already reshaped global supply chains, pushed the dollar to multi-year lows, sent gold past $4,700 per ounce toward all-time highs, driven WTI crude above $97 on Middle East war premium, and forced economies from Hanoi to Hamburg to fundamentally recalibrate their strategic orientation.

The current state of play at market close on May 9, 2026:

EUR/USD: 1.1774 — near a three-year high, reflecting dollar structural weakness

GBP/USD: 1.3488 — pulled back slightly on Fed hold expectations

USD/JPY: 157.80 — BOJ holding at 0.75%, the highest rate since 1995

USD/CNY: 6.840 — yuan near a three-year high against the dollar

Gold (XAU/USD): $4,715 — consolidating near all-time highs, up over 40% year-on-year

WTI Crude: $97.62 — Iran war premium intact

S&P 500: 7,399 — up 0.84% on summit optimism

Bitcoin: $80,420 — range-bound

The market is pricing approximately 58.5% probability of a meaningful deal being announced by May 31. The effective US tariff rate on Chinese goods currently stands at 23.69% — the highest peacetime level since Herbert Hoover. That number alone should communicate the scale of what is at stake. China has leveraged roughly $1.2 trillion in rare earth supply chain dominance as its primary counterweight.

Every major pair is sensitive to this event. Understanding the historical context is not academic exercise — it is the framework that separates informed positioning from reacting to headlines.


PART I: THE 200-YEAR PENDULUM — PROTECTIONISM AND FREE TRADE

Every generation believes its trade war is unprecedented. It never is. Since the Napoleonic Wars ended in 1815, the world has oscillated between protectionism and free trade with the reliability of a geopolitical metronome. Each protectionist wave is driven by the same three forces: rising power anxiety (the established hegemon reaching for barriers to defend against a challenger), domestic political pressure (the distributional consequences of free trade creating concentrated losers with far more political voice than diffuse winners), and technological disruption (each industrial revolution forcing a renegotiation of who produces what, with trade policy as the primary instrument).

The 200-year arc looks like this:

1815 to 1846: The Corn Laws era. Britain at peak imperial power, protecting the aristocratic landowning class at the expense of industrial competitiveness and consumer welfare. Peak protectionism that created political crisis and eventually collapsed under its own weight.

1846 to 1914: The Pax Britannica free trade golden age. Corn Law repeal inaugurates 68 years of progressive trade liberalisation. Global trade volumes grow at rates not seen before or since. Britain as the world's largest creditor nation underwrites a rules-based trading order that benefits virtually every participant.

1914 to 1947: The catastrophic reversal. World War I, the Depression, Smoot-Hawley, World War II. The complete destruction of the liberal trading order and with it approximately 66% of global trade volumes. The most devastating protectionist era in modern history.

1947 to 2017: The GATT/WTO/Pax Americana era. The postwar reconstruction of a rules-based trading order, anchored by American power and the dollar's reserve currency status. Average global tariffs fall from over 40% to under 4%. More people are lifted from poverty than in any equivalent period in human history.

2017 to present: The new protectionist wave. Trump 1.0 fires the opening shot. Biden keeps almost all of it and adds more. Trump 2.0 escalates dramatically. The world is now in the early stages of the third major protectionist wave since 1815.

What makes 2026 different from all previous episodes is that three foundational systems are fracturing simultaneously: the liberal trading order built around the WTO, the dollar's monopoly on global reserve currency status, and American technological supremacy in semiconductors and artificial intelligence. In every previous trade war, the United States held decisive structural advantages in at least two of those three domains. Today it is contesting all three at once, against a peer competitor that has spent thirty years explicitly preparing for this confrontation.


PART II: FIVE HISTORICAL CASE STUDIES THAT FRAME THE SUMMIT

History does not comfort trade war optimists. Of the five major protectionist episodes since 1815, three ended in economic catastrophe, one ended in a managed currency deal that crippled the losing side for a generation, and one produced a face-saving agreement whose commitments were subsequently met at roughly 58% completion.

THE CORN LAWS (1815-1846)

Britain's Corn Laws — tariffs designed to keep grain prices artificially high for the landowning aristocracy — are the foundational case study. They enriched the politically connected, impoverished consumers (contributing to an estimated one million deaths during the Irish Famine of 1845-52), and retarded industrial development by raising the wage floor. Their repeal in 1846, after a decade-long political battle led by Richard Cobden's Anti-Corn Law League, came only after a genuine national crisis forced the issue.

The lesson for 2026: trade barriers, once imposed, create constituencies for their own perpetuation. Removing them requires extraordinary political will. Even moderate voices in the Trump administration are reluctant to commit to a tariff reduction timeline, because the political cost of dismantling protection is concentrated and immediate while the economic benefit is diffuse and delayed.

SMOOT-HAWLEY (1930)

The Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act raised US import duties to their highest peacetime level in history — averaging 45-50% on over 20,000 imported goods. US imports fell from $4.4 billion in 1929 to $1.3 billion by 1932, a 70% collapse. US exports fell by an almost identical proportion as Canada, Britain, France, and Germany retaliated. The Dow Jones fell 90% from its 1929 peak to its 1932 trough. Global trade volumes fell 66%.

Smoot-Hawley did not cause the Great Depression — the Federal Reserve's monetary contraction deserves primary credit for that — but it demonstrably deepened and prolonged it, converting what might have been a severe recession into a civilisational crisis. The precedent haunts every trade war discussion: even a Supreme Court that has struck down the IEEPA tariff architecture cannot fully insulate the global economy from the second-order consequences of a protectionist spiral.

THE CHICKEN TAX (1960s — still in force today)

In the early 1960s, American frozen chicken flooded European markets, devastating French and German poultry farmers. The EEC retaliated with steep poultry tariffs. President Johnson responded with a 25% tariff on European light trucks — specifically targeting Volkswagen's Transporter. More than sixty years later, the Chicken Tax remains US law. It is why America's pickup truck market is dominated by domestic manufacturers, and why foreign automakers spend billions engineering workarounds.

This is the definitive illustration of why trade barriers are so politically durable: once an industry depends on protection, removing it destroys those specific jobs in the short term even if it creates more jobs in aggregate over the long term. The political calculus always favours maintenance.

US-JAPAN TRADE WARS (1980s-1990s)

America and Japan fought rolling, decades-long trade conflicts across textiles, steel, automobiles, and semiconductors. By the mid-1980s the US trade deficit with Japan reached $40 billion — nearly one-third of the total US deficit. The US response combined tariffs, "voluntary export restraints" (quotas disguised as Japanese goodwill), and the 1985 Plaza Accord, which forced the yen to appreciate nearly 50% against the dollar in less than two years.

The resulting yen appreciation crushed Japanese export competitiveness, contributed to the asset bubble that inflated through the late 1980s, and played a decisive role in Japan's subsequent Lost Decade of stagnation. China studied this episode with operational precision. The lesson Beijing drew: never accumulate enough dollar-denominated assets to be vulnerable to currency coercion; never let your economic model become as dependent on US market access as Japan's was; build diplomatic and supply chain leverage that the United States cannot simply buy away. China has spent thirty years implementing those exact lessons. This is why the current trade war is structurally harder to resolve than the Japan episode — China is not Japan, and Xi Jinping knows precisely why.

TRUMP 1.0 (2018-2021)

Trump's first trade war began with steel and aluminium tariffs in March 2018 and escalated through four major rounds to cover approximately $360 billion in Chinese goods at 25% tariffs. China retaliated on $110 billion in US goods, targeting agriculture with surgical political precision — soybean farmers in Iowa, corn farmers in Illinois. US soybean exports to China collapsed from $12.4 billion in 2017 to $3.1 billion in 2018. American farmers received $23 billion in government bailouts — more than the inflation-adjusted cost of the original Marshall Plan.

The S&P 500 fell 20% in Q4 2018 before recovering when the Phase One deal was struck in January 2020, securing Chinese commitments to purchase $200 billion in additional US goods over two years. China met those commitments at approximately 58% completion. Biden inherited the tariffs and kept almost all of them, crossing a political Rubicon: opposition to China tariffs is now untenable in Washington regardless of which party holds power.


PART III: TRUMP 2.0 — THE TARIFF REVOLUTION AND ITS LEGAL MUTATION

Trump's second term has pursued a qualitatively different and more structurally disruptive tariff architecture than the first. The initial framework rested on three legal foundations: Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974 (tariffs on unfair trade practices), Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962 (national security tariffs), and the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, or IEEPA (executive emergency authority invoked via a declared national economic emergency). IEEPA was the most legally aggressive instrument, giving the president effectively unlimited tariff authority with minimal Congressional oversight.

In February 2026, the Supreme Court struck down the IEEPA tariff architecture in a 6-3 ruling, finding that the delegation of unlimited trade authority to the executive branch exceeded Congressional power. Markets initially rallied hard — the S&P 500 gained 4.2% in a single session. The rally was a misreading of the political dynamics. Within weeks, the administration had rerouted tariffs through alternative mechanisms: expanded Section 232 declarations covering semiconductors, critical minerals, pharmaceuticals, and shipbuilding, and new Section 301 investigations covering digital services, AI data flows, and state-subsidised manufacturing.

The net result: the effective tariff rate on Chinese goods, having briefly dipped to approximately 19% following the IEEPA ruling, has recovered to 23.69% as of May 9. The legal architecture changed. The economic reality did not. China has maintained its own retaliatory tariffs of 84% on most US goods, a rate that has made large portions of US agricultural and industrial export sectors effectively non-competitive in the Chinese market.

The economic damage is now quantifiable. Federal Reserve internal modelling suggests the tariff regime has reduced US GDP by approximately 0.6-0.9% on a cumulative basis. Consumer price inflation has run approximately 0.4 percentage points higher than baseline due to tariff pass-through. Business investment has fallen relative to trend as supply chain uncertainty has frozen capital allocation decisions. The US manufacturing sector, which the tariffs were designed to revive, has added approximately 23,000 net jobs — against an initial White House projection of 800,000.

China's experience has been more complex. GDP growth has slowed from 5.2% in 2024 to an estimated 4.3% in 2025 — below the government's official 5% target. But Beijing has simultaneously accelerated its strategic pivot: dramatically expanding trade and investment with Southeast Asia, the Middle East, Africa, and Latin America; deepening the Belt and Road infrastructure network; rolling out the digital yuan (e-CNY) in bilateral trade settlements that bypass the dollar; and using the US-China trade war as political leverage to consolidate its position as the leader of the Global South.


PART IV: THE BEIJING SUMMIT — SIX BATTLEGROUNDS

The summit has six discrete negotiating battlegrounds. Understanding each one is essential for calibrating how different outcomes will register across different markets.

BATTLEGROUND 1: TARIFF LEVELS

The central quantitative question. Markets are pricing a partial deal that reduces the effective US tariff rate on Chinese goods from 23.69% to approximately 15-17% in exchange for Chinese purchasing commitments on US agricultural products, energy, and manufactured goods. A deal at this level is risk-positive across the board: equities rally, USD weakens further, gold consolidates, AUD and commodity currencies strengthen on China trade optimism.

A surprise deep reduction to 10% or below would trigger a significant risk rally and a more aggressive USD selloff. The probability of that outcome is estimated at 12%.

No deal or a breakdown in talks would likely send equities down 3-5%, trigger a flight to JPY and CHF, and potentially push gold through $4,800 on safe-haven demand.

BATTLEGROUND 2: RARE EARTHS

China controls approximately 91% of global rare earth refining capacity. Since 2024 it has imposed escalating export controls on gallium, germanium, dysprosium, terbium, and several other critical materials used in semiconductors, defence systems, electric vehicles, and wind turbines. US manufacturers and defence contractors have characterised the restrictions as a critical national security threat. A deal that rolls back even a portion of these controls would be positively received — particularly by semiconductor stocks and the broader industrial sector.

BATTLEGROUND 3: SEMICONDUCTORS AND DIGITAL TRADE

The US has been escalating chip export restrictions since 2022, progressively tightening the list of advanced semiconductors and chip-making equipment that can be sold to Chinese entities. China wants meaningful rollback. The US is unlikely to concede on the most advanced chips — the political consensus in Washington around semiconductor supremacy is the most durable element of China policy across both parties. But a licensed commercial tier below the most advanced export control ceiling could be presented as progress.

BATTLEGROUND 4: YUAN EXCHANGE RATE

The Trump administration has consistently accused China of currency manipulation despite the yuan having appreciated significantly as the dollar weakened in 2025-26. Any commitment by China to maintain or expand yuan flexibility would be marketed as a concession. In reality, the PBOC's daily fixing mechanism gives Beijing near-total control over the currency's trajectory regardless of what any agreement says. Markets would treat yuan flexibility language as a positive signal for USD/CNH.

BATTLEGROUND 5: FENTANYL SUPPLY CHAIN TRANSPARENCY

The US has linked fentanyl precursor chemical supply chain controls to trade talks. China agreed in principle to cooperate on fentanyl controls in the Biden era but implementation was inconsistent. Meaningful Chinese cooperation here gives the Trump administration a domestic political win that could help justify tariff concessions to a sceptical Republican base.

BATTLEGROUND 6: TAIWAN (THE UNSPOKEN VARIABLE)

Both sides will conspicuously avoid formal discussion of Taiwan. But the summit outcome will be read through a Taiwan lens regardless: a successful deal implies a managed great-power relationship that reduces near-term military risk; a breakdown implies escalating confrontation. FX markets — particularly USD/TWD and risk-correlated pairs — will respond to the Taiwan subtext whether or not it is explicitly addressed.


PART V: STRUCTURAL TRENDS THAT PERSIST REGARDLESS OF THE SUMMIT

The trade war has accelerated three structural trends that were already in motion before 2018 and that will continue regardless of what is agreed in Beijing.

STRUCTURAL TREND 1: CENTRAL BANK GOLD ACCUMULATION

Central banks globally purchased 1,136 tonnes of gold in 2022, 1,037 tonnes in 2023, and approximately 950 tonnes in 2024. The buyers are predominantly emerging market central banks — China, India, Turkey, Poland, the Gulf states — explicitly diversifying reserve holdings away from US Treasuries and dollar-denominated assets. This structural shift in central bank demand is the single most important driver of gold's 40% year-on-year price appreciation. It does not reverse on the back of a trade deal — it is a decade-long strategic reorientation of global reserve management. Understanding this is why the gold bull case is not dependent on the summit outcome.

STRUCTURAL TREND 2: DEDOLLARISATION IN TRADE SETTLEMENT

The dollar's share of global trade invoicing has fallen from approximately 90% in 2000 to around 58% today. The pace of decline has accelerated since the SWIFT exclusion of Russia in 2022 demonstrated that dollar access could be weaponised as a geopolitical tool. China has been the most systematic in building alternatives: bilateral yuan settlement agreements with more than 30 countries, the Cross-Border Interbank Payment System (CIPS) as an alternative to SWIFT, and the e-CNY digital currency for programmable bilateral trade settlement. The dollar is not losing reserve currency status this decade. But the direction of travel has reversed, and the trade war is accelerating the reversal.

STRUCTURAL TREND 3: SUPPLY CHAIN REGIONALISATION

The era of truly global, cost-optimised supply chains is over. What is replacing it is a system of three loosely defined trade blocs — the US-led Western bloc, the China-led Eastern bloc, and a non-aligned middle that includes Southeast Asia, the Gulf, India, and Africa — with companies maintaining parallel supply chains to serve each. This is structurally inflationary (duplication is expensive) and structurally dollar-bearish (less dollar-denominated trade means less organic dollar demand from trade settlement flows).


PART VI: MARKET-BY-MARKET ANALYSIS

EUR/USD

Current: 1.1774. The dollar's structural weakness — driven by fiscal deficit concerns, dedollarisation trends, and the erosion of US yield premium as the Fed approaches a cutting cycle — has been the dominant driver of EUR/USD appreciation in 2026. A strong deal from the summit would cause a temporary USD bounce as risk-on flow slightly reduces safe-haven dollar demand. But the structural trend remains USD-bearish. The 1.15 level that was the ceiling for most of 2025 is now functioning as support. The next significant resistance is 1.21, the post-COVID high.

No-deal scenario: EUR/USD likely rallies toward 1.20 on safe-haven EUR demand and accelerated dollar weakness.

Strong-deal scenario: short-term pullback toward 1.16-1.17 before the structural trend reasserts.

USD/JPY

Current: 157.80. This is the most complex pair in the current environment because it sits at the intersection of three independent narratives: the BOJ's normalisation cycle (hawkish, pushing JPY stronger), the yen carry trade (estimated $500 billion outstanding, vulnerable to rapid unwinding), and the US-China summit (risk-on/risk-off driver). The August 2024 carry trade unwind — when USD/JPY fell 12.4% in a single session — is the template for what happens when all three factors align simultaneously against yen carry positions.

The BOJ held rates at 0.75% in April 2026 in a 6-3 hawkish vote split. A June hike is the base case if Japanese CPI at 2.8% YoY remains elevated. Each BOJ rate hike compresses the interest rate differential that makes the carry trade viable, increasing the risk of progressive unwind. USD/JPY above 155 is increasingly difficult to sustain structurally as the rate differential narrows.

Gold (XAU/USD)

Current: $4,715. Gold has been the single most effective asset class in the current macro environment. The combination of central bank accumulation, dollar weakness, geopolitical risk premium, and inflation concerns has produced 40% year-on-year appreciation. The structural demand from central banks is not deal-dependent. In a no-deal scenario, gold likely tests $4,800-$4,850 on safe-haven demand. In a strong-deal scenario, near-term consolidation continues but the medium-term trend higher remains intact because the structural drivers do not reverse on the back of one summit.

AUD/USD

Current: approximately 0.7168. AUD is one of the clearest expressions of the China trade and commodity sentiment trade in FX. A strong deal drives iron ore and copper higher, improves Chinese import demand for Australian resources, reduces risk aversion, and pushes AUD/USD up. A deal announcement above market expectations could push AUD toward 0.74-0.75. A breakdown could see AUD test 0.68 support.

USD/CNH (Offshore Yuan)

Current: approximately 6.84 (yuan near multi-year highs against the dollar). The PBOC has been allowing measured yuan appreciation as the dollar weakens and as a signal of confidence ahead of the summit. A deal that includes any yuan flexibility language would likely push USD/CNH below 6.80, potentially toward 6.70. A breakdown would likely see the PBOC guide USD/CNH back toward 7.00-7.10 to ease pressure on Chinese exporters.

WTI Crude

Current: $97.62. The primary driver is the Middle East war premium, not the US-China trade dynamic directly. A strong trade deal that improves global growth expectations would support demand expectations and could push WTI toward $100. A deal breakdown combined with any Middle East de-escalation could see a sharp correction toward $85-$87.


PART VII: THREE SCENARIOS FOR THE NEXT 12 MONTHS

SCENARIO A: SUBSTANTIVE DEAL (30% probability)


Both sides announce a tariff reduction framework. US effective rate falls to 14-16%. China rolls back some rare earth controls. Purchase commitments of $150-200 billion in US goods are renewed. Markets respond positively across risk assets. Equities rally 4-6%. Dollar weakens on improved global growth confidence. Gold pulls back slightly but remains structurally supported. This is the hope scenario — partially priced but not fully priced.

SCENARIO B: MANAGED TRUCE (52% probability — base case)

Both sides announce a 90-day negotiating pause during which existing tariff levels are frozen, retaliatory measures are suspended, and working groups are established across the six battleground areas. This is the template of the G20 Osaka truce of 2019. Markets rally modestly on relief. The structural trends in gold, EUR/USD, and dollar weakness continue because the underlying imbalances are not resolved. This is the deal that looks like progress but is essentially a scheduled deferral.

SCENARIO C: BREAKDOWN (18% probability)

Talks collapse over Taiwan posturing, semiconductor decoupling, or domestic political constraints on either side. Risk assets sell off sharply. Gold tests $4,800+. USD/JPY falls toward 150 as carry trade unwinds. AUD/USD tests 0.68. The dollar paradoxically recovers as a short-term safe haven, EUR/USD dips below 1.15, before the structural trend reasserts. This is the tail risk that is not fully priced by markets.

CLOSING NOTE

The Beijing summit is the most important scheduled macro event of the first half of 2026. But the mistake is to think of it as binary — deal or no deal. The more useful framework, informed by 200 years of trade war history, is to ask: how durable is any agreement, and what are the underlying structural forces that persist regardless of what is signed on May 14?

The answers from history are consistent. Trade barriers, once imposed, are politically durable. Structural currency trends, once established, require more than a communiqué to reverse. Central bank gold demand, once triggered by reserve diversification motives, does not stop because a summit went well. And the technology decoupling between the US and China — in semiconductors, AI, and digital finance — is a decade-long process that no bilateral trade agreement will significantly alter.

Position for the summit. But be positioned for the structural trend that persists beyond it.
 
NIKKEI 225: FROM OCCUPIED JAPAN TO THE 2026 ALL-TIME HIGH — THE COMPLETE STORY OF THE WORLD'S LONGEST STOCK MARKET RECOVERY AND THE $500 BILLION CARRY TRADE SITTING UNDERNEATH IT
Published: May 11, 2026
Source: Capital Street FX Research Desk


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Full analysis: https://www.capitalstreetfx.com/daily-blog/nikkei-225-history-bubble-crash-carry-trade-2026/

THE HEADLINE NUMBERS

On May 7, 2026, the Nikkei 225 closed at 62,833.84 — posting its largest single-day point gain in history: 3,320 points in one session, driven by US-Iran peace deal optimism and five trading days of accumulated buying pressure from closed Japanese markets.

The index that began life in 1949 as a three-digit number scratched together from the rubble of occupied Japan has now more than doubled since it finally erased its 1989 bubble peak in February 2024. It took thirty-four years and three months. No major developed-market index has ever waited longer to recover from a peak.

Key data as of May 7, 2026:

Nikkei 225: 62,833.84 — ALL-TIME RECORD HIGH

TOPIX: 3,840.49 — up 3.00%

USD/JPY: approximately 144.80 — yen strengthening, BOJ intervention suspected

BOJ Policy Rate: 0.75% — highest since 1995, 6-3 hawkish vote split in April 2026

Japan CPI: 2.8% YoY — BOJ June hike now base case

Yen Carry Trade Outstanding: estimated $500 billion+ (Morgan Stanley) — partial unwind underway

10-Year JGB Yield: approximately 1.55% — highest in decades

Nikkei 1989 Bubble Peak: 38,915.87 — first eclipsed February 2024

This article covers the complete 148-year institutional history of the Tokyo Stock Exchange, the economic miracle, the bubble, the 34-year collapse, the Lost Decade, the carry trade era, the August 2024 crash-and-recovery, and what the current $500 billion carry trade means for every JPY pair and risk asset you trade.


PART I: THE TOKYO STOCK EXCHANGE — 148 YEARS FROM SAMURAI BONDS TO ELECTRONIC MILLISECONDS

To understand the Nikkei 225, you must first understand the exchange it lives on. The Tokyo Stock Exchange is not merely a marketplace. It is a direct chronicle of Japanese civilisation across three imperial eras, two world wars, an occupation, an economic miracle, the greatest asset bubble in modern history, and now a structural revolution in corporate governance that has drawn foreign capital back to Japan for the first time in three decades.

As of late 2025, the TSE lists approximately 3,943 companies with a combined market capitalisation of approximately $6.34 trillion — the third largest exchange in the world by that measure. Its history is the history of modern Japan rendered in prices.

THE MEIJI FOUNDATION (1878)

The district of Kabuto-cho in Tokyo's Nihonbashi ward takes its name from "Kabuto-zuka" — Armour Mound — a burial site from the Edo era built on coastal reclamation ordered by the Tokugawa shogunate. The connection between military power and financial power in that name proved permanent.

Japan in 1878 was in the middle of the most rapid voluntary modernisation in human history. The Meiji government, having watched Western imperial powers carve up Asia while Japan remained feudally isolated, had decided to industrialise at maximum speed. That required capital markets. It also required a mechanism to trade the government bonds issued to Japan's former samurai class — the kinroku kosai, salary bonds that compensated the warrior caste for the abolition of their hereditary stipends.

Finance Minister Shigenobu Okuma enacted the Stock Exchange Ordinance on May 4, 1878. Eleven days later, the licence was granted to a founding group that included Eiichi Shibusawa — Japan's most celebrated industrialist, later chosen as the face of the 10,000-yen banknote. Trading commenced on June 1, 1878, with four listed stocks and five types of government bonds, auctions conducted using a hinawa — a burning rope — as the time limit per session. The exchange opened 87 years after the New York Stock Exchange was founded under a buttonwood tree.

WARTIME, OCCUPATION, AND CLOSURE (1937-1949)

In June 1943, the government completed a forced merger of all eleven regional Japanese stock exchanges into a single semi-governmental entity: the Japan Securities Exchange. The purpose was explicit — to channel capital toward war production under centralised direction. Floor trading was suspended on August 1, 1945, four days before Hiroshima. Japan surrendered September 2. General MacArthur signed a directive on September 25 prohibiting all stock market activity.

The TSE building was occupied by General Headquarters of the Allied Forces from October 1945 until January 1948. For two and a half years, the largest financial institution in Japan's history functioned as office space for its occupiers. Securities companies, forbidden from formal trading, conducted semi-organised over-the-counter transactions on the streets around Kabuto-cho — informal markets that kept Japan's capital allocation alive at minimal scale through the deepest years of reconstruction.

THE REOPENING (MAY 16, 1949)

Under the new Securities and Exchange Act — modelled on the US Securities Exchange Act of 1934 — the Tokyo Stock Exchange reopened on May 16, 1949. Its first day was not triumphant: trading was thin, the economy was in ruins, and the index began at 176.21. But the institution existed again. The scoreboard was back on.

The Nikkei Stock Average — officially the Nikkei 225 — was introduced on May 16, 1949, calculated retroactively to May 16, 1949, using a price-weighted methodology modelled on the Dow Jones Industrial Average. The 225 constituents were selected from the First Section of the TSE: the largest, most liquid companies. Its opening value: 176.21.


PART II: THE ECONOMIC MIRACLE AND THE FIRST GREAT ASCENT (1949-1989)

OCCUPATION PEG AND RECONSTRUCTION (1949-1955)


Japan's postwar economic recovery proceeded under two constraints that paradoxically proved enabling. First, Article 9 of the Allied-imposed constitution prohibited Japan from maintaining offensive military forces, which meant that defence spending — which had consumed roughly 30% of GDP in the war years — was redirected into industrial investment. Second, the yen was pegged at 360 to the dollar under the Dodge Line stabilisation plan, giving Japanese exporters a fixed, competitive exchange rate against which to build.

Korean War procurement orders from 1950 provided the initial demand shock that kickstarted Japan's industrial revival. Steel mills, shipyards, and electronics factories that had been bombed or repurposed for occupation service were rapidly rebuilt and upgraded. Toyota's first US exports arrived in 1958. Sony's first transistor radios reached American consumers the same year.

THE ECONOMIC MIRACLE (1955-1973)

Between 1955 and 1973, Japan's GDP grew at an average rate of approximately 10% per year — a sustained pace of growth with no historical precedent among developed nations. The Nikkei 225 rose from 176 to approximately 5,000 over the same period, a 28-fold appreciation. The driving forces were: massive public investment in infrastructure, a deliberate industrial policy that channelled bank credit toward targeted export sectors (steel, shipbuilding, automobiles, electronics), a highly educated and disciplined workforce, and access to the vast American consumer market opened by the postwar alliance.

THE FIRST OIL SHOCK AND ADAPTATION (1973-1984)

The 1973 OPEC oil embargo hit Japan harder than almost any other economy: the country imported approximately 99% of its oil at the time. GDP contracted for the first time in the postwar period. The Nikkei fell sharply. But Japan's response was to aggressively invest in energy efficiency, shift its industrial mix toward higher-value-added exports (electronics, precision machinery, automobiles) that used less energy per unit of output, and accelerate its competitive advantage in quality manufacturing.

By the early 1980s Japan was running a massive trade surplus with the United States — particularly in automobiles and consumer electronics — and the trade conflict that would ultimately trigger the Plaza Accord was already building.


PART III: THE PLAZA ACCORD, THE BUBBLE, AND THE GREATEST MANIA IN MODERN FINANCIAL HISTORY (1985-1989)

THE PLAZA ACCORD (SEPTEMBER 1985)


By 1985, the US trade deficit with Japan had reached levels that American politicians and manufacturers considered intolerable. The Reagan administration concluded that the core problem was the dollar's overvaluation against the yen — a valuation sustained partly by high US interest rates and partly by perceived currency manipulation. On September 22, 1985, the finance ministers of the G5 nations — the US, Japan, West Germany, France, and the UK — met at the Plaza Hotel in New York and agreed to jointly intervene in currency markets to depreciate the dollar.

The Plaza Accord worked with shocking speed. The yen appreciated from approximately 240 per dollar before the accord to approximately 128 by 1988 — a 47% appreciation in less than three years. For Japanese exporters, this was an existential shock. Companies that had built their business models on selling goods priced in yen to customers paying in dollars suddenly found their products 47% more expensive in American shops.

The Bank of Japan's response was to cut interest rates aggressively — from 5% to 2.5% between 1985 and 1987 — to stimulate domestic demand and offset the export compression. This decision, combined with financial deregulation that had expanded credit availability in the early 1980s, created the conditions for the most spectacular asset price bubble in modern financial history.

THE BUBBLE (1987-1989)

The combination of ultra-low interest rates and abundant credit produced an extraordinary surge in Japanese asset prices across stocks and real estate simultaneously. Land in central Tokyo became the most expensive on earth — the land under the Imperial Palace grounds was estimated to be worth more than all the real estate in California. Japanese banks, their balance sheets inflated by the collateral value of real estate holdings, lent against those inflated values to fund further speculation. The circularity was the mechanism of the bubble.

The Nikkei 225 rose from approximately 13,000 in 1985 to a peak of 38,915.87 on December 29, 1989 — a 200% appreciation in four years. At peak valuation, the price-to-earnings ratio of the Japanese equity market exceeded 60x — roughly three times the historical average. The total capitalisation of the Tokyo Stock Exchange briefly exceeded that of the New York Stock Exchange, making Japan — with roughly 8% of world GDP — the host of the world's most valuable equity market.

The mood at the peak was one of absolute conviction. Japanese financial institutions were buying trophy real estate across New York, London, and Los Angeles. Japanese corporations were acquiring US entertainment studios and golf courses. The phrase "Japan as Number One" — the title of a 1979 Harvard sociologist's book — had become not just a description but a prediction that many Japanese believed would be fulfilled within a decade.


PART IV: THE COLLAPSE — 38,915 TO 7,603 IN 13 YEARS (1990-2003)

On January 4, 1990, the Bank of Japan raised interest rates. It was the first of five rate hikes that would push the policy rate from 2.5% to 6% by August 1990. The bubble could not survive positive real interest rates.

The Nikkei fell 39% in 1990 alone. It fell a further 26% by the end of 1992. And then something unprecedented happened: instead of recovering, as every previous equity bear market in modern history had done within a few years, Japan kept falling. Or rather, it kept failing to recover in any sustained way.

The mechanism of the prolonged decline was the debt-deflation trap. Japanese banks held massive portfolios of loans collateralised by real estate that had fallen 50-80% from peak values. The collateral was worth less than the loans it backed. But rather than recognising these losses — which would have required capital raises or bank failures — Japanese banks continued to roll the loans, receiving interest payments on debts that could never be fully repaid, and maintaining on their books a fiction of solvency that prevented the banking system from doing its primary job: allocating credit to productive uses.

This zombie bank phenomenon kept capital locked in dying companies and industries, prevented new entrants from competing, and slowly strangled Japan's capacity for the creative destruction that is the engine of economic renewal. The Japanese government responded to the growth slowdown with fiscal stimulus — approximately 10 major stimulus packages between 1992 and 2000 — that succeeded in preventing outright depression but failed to restart sustained growth, while accumulating the public debt that would eventually push Japan's debt-to-GDP ratio above 260%.

The Nikkei reached its ultimate post-bubble trough at 7,603 on April 28, 2003 — a 80% decline from the December 1989 peak. Thirteen years to fall 80%. And then another twenty years before the peak was recovered.


PART V: THE LOST DECADES — WHAT ZERO RATES, DEFLATION, AND DEMOGRAPHICS DID TO JAPAN (1991-2012)

The phrase "Lost Decade" applied to Japan in the 1990s eventually had to be revised to "Lost Decades" — plural — as the 2000s failed to deliver the recovery that had been expected. The period from 1991 to 2012 was characterised by three reinforcing structural problems that conventional monetary and fiscal policy proved unable to solve.

DEFLATION: THE SELF-REINFORCING TRAP

Consumer prices in Japan fell or stagnated for most of the period from 1999 to 2012. Deflation is not merely a statistical inconvenience — it is a behavioural trap. When prices are expected to fall, rational consumers and businesses postpone purchases and investment because the same money buys more goods tomorrow than today. This postponement reduces demand, which further depresses prices, which reinforces the incentive to wait. Breaking this cycle requires changing expectations, which requires sustained policy credibility.

Japan's attempts to generate inflation failed repeatedly because the Bank of Japan was seen as prioritising price stability over growth, because fiscal stimulus was repeatedly withdrawn before the recovery was established, and because the deflationary impulses from ageing demographics, technological deflation, and cheap Chinese manufacturing were too powerful for marginal policy adjustments to overcome.

DEMOGRAPHICS: THE HEADWIND THAT CANNOT BE STIMULATED AWAY

Japan's population peaked at approximately 128 million in 2010 and has been declining since. The working-age population (15-64) peaked earlier, in the mid-1990s. A shrinking and ageing workforce reduces the economy's productive capacity, increases the fiscal burden of social security and healthcare, reduces domestic consumption, and compresses the tax base from which government revenues are drawn.

Demographics do not respond to interest rate cuts or fiscal packages. They are the slowest-moving of all macroeconomic forces, but ultimately among the most powerful. Japan's demographic trajectory remains one of the most challenging in the developed world: the population is projected to fall below 100 million by approximately 2050.

THE BOJ AND UNCONVENTIONAL POLICY

Beginning in 1999 with the world's first zero interest rate policy (ZIRP) and continuing through quantitative easing from 2001, yield curve control from 2016, and the long-running Abenomics experiment from 2013, the Bank of Japan became the world's laboratory for unconventional monetary policy. Nearly every tool that the Federal Reserve and European Central Bank adopted in the aftermath of the 2008-09 financial crisis — zero rates, asset purchases, forward guidance — had been pioneered by the BOJ years earlier.


PART VI: ABENOMICS AND THE YEN-POWERED RECOVERY (2013-2020)

Shinzo Abe's election in December 2012 and the subsequent launch of "Abenomics" marked the most ambitious attempt yet to break Japan's deflationary stagnation. The programme rested on three "arrows": aggressive monetary easing (BOJ asset purchases at an unprecedented scale), fiscal stimulus (government spending targeted at infrastructure and social programs), and structural reforms (labour market flexibility, corporate governance reform, trade liberalisation through the TPP).

The monetary arrow was fired immediately and aggressively. Under new BOJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda, the Bank expanded its asset purchase programme to double the monetary base within two years. The immediate market reaction was dramatic: the yen fell approximately 30% against the dollar between late 2012 and mid-2015, from approximately 78 to above 125. The Nikkei 225 more than doubled between late 2012 and mid-2015, rising from approximately 8,700 to above 20,000.

The yen depreciation was the primary transmission mechanism. A weaker yen directly boosted the yen-denominated profits of Japan's major exporters — Toyota, Honda, Sony, Canon — which translated into higher earnings, higher dividends, and higher share prices. Foreign investors, observing the combination of cheap stocks, improving earnings, and BOJ support, began returning to Japan for the first time in two decades.

The corporate governance reform — the structural arrow that received less attention — proved in the long run to be the most consequential. The Tokyo Stock Exchange began requiring companies trading below book value (where the market capitalisation is less than the net asset value of the company) to either improve returns to shareholders or face delisting pressure. This was a radical departure from the traditional Japanese corporate governance model, in which companies could indefinitely hold excess cash, maintain cross-shareholdings in allied companies, and resist shareholder pressure. The reform began attracting foreign activist investors and private equity, which in turn accelerated the corporate governance improvements the TSE was demanding.


PART VII: THE CARRY TRADE ERA — HOW CHEAP YEN REBUILT EVERYTHING THE BUBBLE DESTROYED (2020-2024)

The yen carry trade is the dominant structural feature of the current Nikkei rally and one of the most important structural risks in global markets. Understanding it is not optional for any participant in JPY pairs or risk assets.

THE MECHANICS

The carry trade is simple in structure: borrow in a low-interest-rate currency, convert the borrowed funds into a higher-interest-rate currency or higher-yielding asset, and pocket the interest rate differential. The profitability depends on two things: the interest rate differential (the "carry") and the exchange rate stability (if the funding currency appreciates against the investment currency, the appreciation erodes or eliminates the carry profit).

Japan's zero interest rate policy — maintained from 1999 through 2024 with only brief interruptions — made the yen the world's preferred funding currency for carry trades. The math was compelling: borrow yen at 0%, convert to US dollars, buy US Treasuries yielding 4.5%, and collect 4.5% annually as long as USD/JPY remains stable or moves in your favour. Scale this trade to institutional size — $500 billion in estimated outstanding positions according to Morgan Stanley — and you have one of the largest single structural positions in global financial markets.

THE NIKKEI CONNECTION

The yen carry trade is directly connected to the Nikkei rally through two mechanisms. First, foreign investors borrowed in yen to fund purchases of Japanese equities — a self-reinforcing dynamic in which rising equities attracted more carry-funded purchases, which further drove the Nikkei higher. Second, the yen depreciation itself boosted the yen-denominated profits of Japanese exporters, which made Japanese equities more attractive to foreign investors, which attracted more carry-funded purchases.

The Nikkei's journey from approximately 16,000 in early 2020 to 38,916 — the 1989 bubble peak — in February 2024 and then to 62,833 by May 2026 is inseparable from the yen carry trade. The index essentially doubled twice in five years, powered by the combination of improving corporate governance, record inbound tourism, a structural increase in global semiconductor and technology demand, and a $500 billion carry trade that mechanically channelled global capital into Japanese assets.


PART VIII: AUGUST 5, 2024 — THE LARGEST SINGLE-SESSION CRASH SINCE 1987

On July 31, 2024, the Bank of Japan raised its policy rate by 15 basis points to 0.25% — a small hike in absolute terms, but one that was accompanied by rhetoric suggesting further hikes were coming faster than markets had anticipated. The yen, which had been trading above 160 against the dollar (its weakest level in decades), began strengthening sharply.

The carry trade mathematics suddenly reversed. Borrowed yen were becoming more expensive to repay. USD/JPY fell from above 160 toward 142 — a 11% yen appreciation in less than two weeks. For carry traders who had borrowed in yen, every percentage point of yen appreciation was a percentage point of loss on the funding side of their position. The rational response — to unwind the trade by selling the invested assets and repaying the yen loans — is itself the mechanism that amplifies yen appreciation and asset price declines. This is the carry trade unwind in action.

On August 5, 2024, the Nikkei fell 12.4% in a single session — the largest single-day percentage decline since the 1987 Black Monday crash. The VIX volatility index surged to 65, its highest level since the COVID market disruption of March 2020. US technology stocks fell sharply on contagion from the carry unwind. The KOSPI (South Korean), Taiwan Stock Exchange, and ASX all fell in sympathy.

Then — with remarkable speed — the BOJ signalled it would not proceed with further rapid rate hikes given market instability. The carry unwind reversed almost as quickly as it had begun. Within a week, the Nikkei had recovered approximately 9%. Within a month, it had recovered to pre-crash levels.

The August 2024 episode is the single most important template for understanding the current risk in Japan. It demonstrated that: (1) the carry trade unwind can happen with extreme velocity; (2) the BOJ is highly sensitive to market feedback and will moderate its tightening path if markets react severely; and (3) the global contagion from a Japanese carry unwind is substantial — it affects US tech stocks, EM currencies, and the VIX directly.


PART IX: THE RECORD RUN TO 62,833 — WHAT DROVE THE NEW ALL-TIME HIGH (2024-2026)

The Nikkei's surge from 38,916 (the February 2024 recovery of the 1989 bubble peak) to 62,833 (the May 2026 all-time high) was driven by a confluence of factors that went well beyond the carry trade.

FACTOR 1: CORPORATE GOVERNANCE REVOLUTION

The TSE's sustained pressure on companies trading below book value — and the growing receptivity of Japanese management to shareholder returns as a legitimate business priority — produced a structural improvement in Japanese corporate earnings quality. Share buybacks reached record levels. Dividend payouts increased substantially. Return on equity, long a weakness of Japanese corporations compared to US and European peers, improved steadily. This made Japanese equities genuinely more attractive on fundamentals, not just on carry mechanics.

FACTOR 2: WARREN BUFFETT'S ENDORSEMENT

In 2020, Berkshire Hathaway disclosed stakes in five major Japanese trading houses (sogo shosha): Itochu, Marubeni, Mitsubishi, Mitsui, and Sumitomo. Buffett's investment — and his subsequent increases in those stakes — acted as a powerful signal to global institutional capital that Japanese equities deserved serious re-evaluation. The trading house stakes became one of Berkshire's best-performing positions, generating substantial returns as the companies increased buybacks and dividends.

FACTOR 3: SEMICONDUCTOR AND AI DEMAND

Japan is home to a world-class semiconductor equipment and materials industry — companies like Tokyo Electron, Shin-Etsu Chemical, SUMCO, and Advantest that produce the tooling and raw materials used across the global chip supply chain. The AI-driven surge in semiconductor demand from 2023 onward produced extraordinary earnings growth for these companies, which drove their share prices and contributed significantly to the Nikkei's advance.

FACTOR 4: INBOUND TOURISM BOOM

The combination of a weak yen and post-COVID travel recovery produced a record inbound tourism boom. Japan welcomed approximately 36 million international visitors in 2024, spending at record levels. This tourism spend directly boosted the retail, hospitality, real estate, and services sectors that had been depressed during the COVID years.

FACTOR 5: MAY 7, 2026 — THE RECORD SESSION

The specific session that produced the all-time high of 62,833.84 was driven by US-Iran peace deal optimism following five days of closed Japanese markets during the Golden Week holiday. The combination of pent-up buying pressure, positive global risk sentiment, and specific US-Iran developments produced a single-session gain of 3,320 points — the largest point gain in the index's 77-year history.


PART X: THE BOJ DILEMMA AND THE CARRY TRADE RISK

The Bank of Japan is currently caught between two legitimate but conflicting objectives. On one side: Japan's CPI at 2.8% YoY and a 6-3 hawkish vote split on the April 2026 policy board suggest that the conditions for continued rate normalisation are present — inflation is above target and the economy is growing. On the other side: the $500 billion yen carry trade is an extraordinarily large structural position that becomes systematically at risk every time the BOJ raises rates or signals further hikes.

The August 2024 episode established the BOJ's de facto communication rule: it can raise rates, but it must do so slowly and with careful market management, because an uncontrolled carry unwind would cause global financial instability that would almost certainly reverse the Japanese economic recovery the BOJ is trying to support.

This creates a dynamic where the BOJ is effectively being asked to raise rates at a pace that normalises Japanese monetary policy without triggering a carry unwind. Whether that is achievable is the central question for USD/JPY and for global risk assets in 2026 and 2027.

FOR TRADERS: WHAT THIS MEANS ACROSS YOUR POSITIONS

USD/JPY: The structural trend is toward yen strength as the BOJ normalises rates and the carry trade unwinds progressively. The pace of that normalisation is the unknown. Every BOJ meeting is a potential catalyst for a sharp yen move. The August 2024 template — where USD/JPY moved 12% in two weeks — sets the risk parameters.

Nikkei 225 (Japan225 in CFD markets): The index is at all-time highs but the structural support from the carry trade is simultaneously the index's greatest vulnerability. A rapid BOJ hike cycle that triggers a full carry unwind could reverse a substantial portion of the 2020-2026 gains very quickly. The corporate governance improvement is a genuine structural support that survives the carry trade, but it cannot offset a $500 billion unwind.

AUD/JPY: One of the most reliable carry trade proxies. When the carry trade is intact, AUD/JPY trends higher. When it unwinds, AUD/JPY falls sharply as investors simultaneously sell AUD (risk-off) and buy JPY (cover yen short positions). This pair is a direct risk-on/risk-off barometer for the carry trade.

CHF/JPY: Similar dynamic to AUD/JPY. Swiss franc is simultaneously a safe-haven currency and (since 2015) a lower-yielding currency that can itself be a carry funding currency. CHF/JPY is a complex but useful indicator of relative safe-haven demand.

Key support levels for Nikkei 225: 58,000 (recent breakout level), 54,000 (major structural support), 48,000 (pre-2026 ATH period).

Key resistance: 65,000 (projected extension), 70,000 (multi-year institutional target).

CLOSING NOTE

The Nikkei 225's journey from 176 in 1949 to 62,833 in 2026 is one of the most extraordinary investment narratives in financial history. It is simultaneously a story of economic miracle, of the most spectacular bubble and collapse in modern market history, of thirty-four years of waiting, and of a structural recovery driven by genuinely improved corporate governance, a global AI and semiconductor demand boom, and a $500 billion carry trade that is now unwinding in slow motion against a backdrop of BOJ rate normalisation.

The opportunity and the risk are embedded in the same structure. Understanding the full historical arc is not just intellectually interesting — it is the analytical prerequisite for managing exposure to any JPY pair or Japanese equity position over the next two to three years.
 
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