Weekly Analysis by zForex Research Team

Peace Deal De-Escalates Energy Risk (15 - 19 June, 2026)​

Global markets experienced a strong wave of risk-on sentiment this week following reports of an interim agreement between the US and Iran to halt their military conflict and reopen the Strait of Hormuz, where nearly 600 vessels are currently stranded. The peace deal, scheduled to be signed in Switzerland on Friday, establishes a 60-day window for talks regarding Iran’s nuclear program, offering immediate maritime ceasefire terms and partial sanctions relief on Iranian overseas oil sales.

The de-escalation pushed Brent crude down sharply to $83.50/bbl, reducing energy-driven inflation fears worldwide. In tandem, US macroeconomic sentiment improved noticeably as consumer confidence bounced back, allowing sovereign bond yields to recede from recent highs and giving precious metals room to recover.

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Market Drivers & Catalysts​

  • The Swiss Interim Accord: The upcoming Friday signing provides a 60-day diplomatic runway. While broader financial incentives remain unclear, the immediate reopening of the Strait of Hormuz is dismantling the war's acute supply premium.
  • Easing US Inflation Expectations: The University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index jumped to 48.9 in June (vs 46.0 expected). Crucially, 1-year inflation expectations dropped to 4.6%, while the 5-year outlook fell to 3.4%.
  • Unblocking Global Supply: With near 600 ships waiting to exit the Persian Gulf, oil prices dipped significantly, though they remain roughly $13 above pre-war benchmarks as inventories await rebuilding.
  • The Warsh Era Begins: Markets are braced for the first Federal Reserve policy meeting under newly appointed Chair Kevin Warsh. While rates are expected to hold steady, traders are looking for any hawkish signs of a late-2026 hike.
  • BOJ's Critical Threshold: Japan's 10-year bond yield hit 2.56% during the week as markets fully price in a 25 basis point rate hike at the upcoming meeting, which would lift the policy rate to 1.00%, its highest since 1995.

Fixed Income​

  • US 2-Year Treasury Yield: Settled under 4.03%, dropping roughly 5 basis points on Monday alone as fading oil risks drove buyers back into short-duration paper, bringing the key 4.00% psychological level into view.
  • US 10-Year Treasury Yield: Slipped below 4.43%, losing 5 basis points over the week. Softening energy benchmarks directly lowered the market's long-term inflation projections and aggressive Fed tightening bets.
  • Japan 2-Year JGB Yield: Fell 1.5 basis points to slide below 1.40%. The reduction in crude prices temporarily softened near-term domestic inflation pressure ahead of the central bank's rate decision.
  • Japan 10-Year JGB Yield: Shook off an intraday drop to 2.56% to stabilize near 2.58%. The market remains firmly positioned for a monetary tightening cycle to help defend the yen.

Commodities​

Gold staged a notable recovery following last week's aggressive liquidation. Lower oil prices helped cool global rate-hike anxieties, pushing the metal toward its primary technical barrier: the 200-day moving average near $4,450/oz.

Silver and other hard assets rallied alongside gold. The stabilization of energy inputs renewed investor interest in non-yielding tangible assets under a less aggressive global central bank outlook.

Currencies​

  • U.S. Dollar Index (DXY): Weakened across the board. The reduction in geopolitical hostilities dented safe-haven demand for the dollar, shifting capital toward pro-growth currencies.
  • Euro: Rebounded back above the key 1.1575–1.1600 technical resistance zone to trade near 1.1620 during early European trading hours, indicating renewed upside momentum.
  • Australian Dollar: Climbed past 0.7085, engineering a full recovery from the previous Friday's depressed close below the 0.7050 mark, fueled by surging global risk appetite.
  • Japanese Yen: Briefly strengthened below 160.00 per dollar before hovering just above that boundary. Traders are reluctant to chase the currency too far ahead of the historic BOJ meeting.

Economic Data Highlights​

  • US Consumer Sentiment (June): Printed at 48.9, a clear improvement from May’s 44.8 reading, signaling that households are responding positively to the cooling energy crisis.
  • US 1-Year Inflation Expectations: Declined to 4.6%, easing immediate pressure on the Federal Reserve to signal additional interest rate hikes this summer.
  • US 5-Year Inflation Expectations: Dropped to 3.4%, demonstrating that long-run consumer price expectations are beginning to re-anchor as shipping corridors reopen.
  • BOJ Policy Rate Target: Priced heavily for a move to 1.00% from the current 0.75%, a level unseen for over three decades, to curb imported energy distortions.

Macro Calendar Highlights​

  • Federal Reserve Policy Meeting & Press Conference (Chair Kevin Warsh)
  • Bank of Japan (BOJ) Interest Rate Decision
  • Bank of England (BoE) Monetary Policy Announcement & UK CPI
  • China Monthly Macro Portfolio (Industrial Production, Retail Sales, Investment)
  • US Retail Sales, Industrial Production, and Housing Starts (May)
 
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