Macro / overnight

- Ceasefire optimism is wobbling but not broken.

- After the Asia USD selloff, it was notable that the USD couldn’t extend materially in London and ended up broadly unchanged.

- That price action is mildly encouraging for the medium-term USD debasement / rotation / hedging narrative, but the desk is not ready to fully re-engage while headlines remain contradictory.

- The market is now stuck between:

- tentative optimism that both sides want some form of resolution

- and the reality that the bar for any durable deal is still very high

- With weekend talks approaching, gap risk remains very real.

---

## Market tone

- Broad tone is cautious tactical USD shorts, but in small size.

- This is not full conviction risk-on.

- Key idea:

- if there is eventual resolution, the pre-existing USD debasement / asset reallocation / hedging diversification theme should come back strongly

- but until then, positions need to be nimble and sized for headline risk

---

## FX themes by currency

### EUR

- EUR remains constructive, but the desk wants a stronger technical confirmation before getting more excited.

- Key area is the 1.1640 / 1.1671 retracement zone, with the more important technical hurdle the 1.1673 / 1.1693 cluster of the 50d / 100d / 200d moving averages.

- A 2-day close above that zone would be a more meaningful bullish signal for EURUSD.

- Broader read remains that once there is a cleaner resolution, EUR should benefit from the USD credibility / diversification theme.

- Takeaway: constructive EUR view, but still more tactical than aggressive.

### AUD

- AUD is the preferred USD short expression right now.

- The author is currently short USD primarily against AUD, though not in size.

- The logic is:

- AUD gives exposure to a softer-USD / eventual resolution view

- while also capturing the idea that commodity-friendly, high-beta currencies can perform if the environment stabilizes

- For the USD to hold its recent rebound, AUDUSD should stay above the 0.7013 / 0.7040 retracement zone.

- Takeaway: AUD is the favorite tactical vehicle for near-term USD downside.

### NZD

- NZD was the second-best G10 performer yesterday.

- Support came from:

- a more hawkish-than-expected RBNZ

- relief rally dynamics, given NZD had been one of the most punished currencies during the conflict

- The desk still isn’t naturally keen to chase NZD, but would become more constructive if it can post a 2-day close above 0.5850, where the 100d and 200d moving averages sit.

- Takeaway: NZD is improving technically and fundamentally, but conviction remains conditional on the chart.

### GBP

- Yesterday saw very heavy USD selling participation:

- DHF: 4z

- SHF: 2z

- RM: 1z

- But nerves have crept back in because of confusion around whether Lebanon is actually covered by the ceasefire.

- Even so, the bias remains to run some tactical USD shorts, with the author explicitly saying EUR and high-beta commodity currencies should be part of that basket.

- On GBP specifically:

- preference remains to build EURGBP longs

- especially in the 0.8680 / 0.8700 zone

- with 0.8750 as resistance

- In cable:

- 1.3485 / 1.3500 remains the key topside cap

- 1.3350 should be short-term support

- Sterling was not a major flow participant yesterday on a net basis.

- Takeaway: GBP can benefit from softer USD, but the cleaner trade remains long EURGBP.

### JPY

- JPY remains frustratingly rangebound; if you simply traded 158 / 160 in USDJPY, you did well.

- JPY was the favorite hedge fund buy yesterday, likely reflecting rates moves, but broader participation was lacking.

- Local corporates faded the move, which is at least mildly informative.

- The desk is happy to stay sidelined, especially after a difficult Q1.

- Base case is JPY continues to move with the broader USD while cross-JPY grinds higher.

- Takeaway: no strong edge; JPY remains more of a tactical range trade than a conviction macro view.

### CHF

- Despite large FX moves elsewhere, EURCHF stayed relatively stable.

- Flows were mixed:

- real money sold CHF

- systematics bought CHF

- The desk had been looking to buy dips in EURCHF, but with the ceasefire looking fragile and risk already on elsewhere, appetite to get short CHF is fading.

- Takeaway: back to neutral / sidelined on CHF.

### CAD

- The CAD view has shifted.

- Medium term, the desk had been bearish CAD because of:

- weak domestic growth

- USMCA negotiation risk

- But if there is a more durable geopolitical resolution, CAD could benefit from the asset reallocation / anti-USD policy uncertainty theme.

- Importantly, local real money accounts were buying CAD yesterday.

- On that basis, the desk has now flipped modestly long CAD.

- Takeaway: near-term CAD bias has turned constructive, driven by flow and potential post-resolution reallocation dynamics.

---

## Positioning / trade color

- Running modest USD shorts

- Preferred expression: short USD vs AUD

- Still constructive on EUR

- Added to EURGBP longs

- Flipped modestly long CAD

- Staying sidelined on JPY and CHF

- Overall sizing remains small due to weekend headline risk

---

## Flows

- Heavy USD selling yesterday

- DHF led with 4z

- SHF added 2z

- RM added 1z

- In GBP, flows were relatively muted on a net basis

- In JPY, hedge funds were buyers, but local corporates faded

- In CHF, RM sold CHF while systematics bought it

- In CAD, local RM demand showed up and was important enough to shift the desk view modestly bullish

---

## Key levels to watch

- **AUDUSD:** 0.7013 / 0.7040

- **EURUSD retracement support:** 1.1640 / 1.1671

- **EURUSD key MA cluster:** 1.1673 / 1.1693

- **NZDUSD key technical level:** 0.5850

- **EURGBP build zone:** 0.8680 / 0.8700

- **EURGBP resistance:** 0.8750

- **GBPUSD resistance:** 1.3485 / 1.3500

- **GBPUSD support:** 1.3350

- **USDJPY range:** 158 / 160

---

## What clients should hear this morning

- The desk still likes being tactically short USD, but only in controlled size.

- AUD is the preferred expression, with EUR still constructive and NZD improving.

- EURGBP longs remain a favored relative-value trade.

- The biggest change this morning is CAD, where the desk has flipped modestly long on the back of RM demand and the possibility that a cleaner resolution reactivates the reallocation theme.

- JPY and CHF are both “nothing to do” for now.

---

## Bottom line

Morning call bias remains modestly USD-negative, expressed mainly through AUD and selectively EUR, while EURGBP longs are being added and CAD has turned tactically constructive. But this is still a small-size, headline-sensitive setup with real weekend gap risk.

If you want, I can also turn this into:

- a 30-second desk script

- a one-paragraph client email

- a bias / levels / flow table