We would suggest that right now Markets are underestimating the impact of April 2 US Reciprocal Tariffs – aka Liberation Day monikered by the President.There is consistent and constant chatter around what is being referred to as The Dirty 15. This is the 15 countries the president suggests has been taking advantage of the United States of America for too long. The original thinking was The Dirty 15 for those countries with the highest levels of tariffs or some form of taxation system against US goods. However, there is also growing evidence that actually The Dirty 15 are the 15 nations that have the largest trade relations with the US.That is an entirely different thought process because those 15 countries include players like Japan, South Korea, Germany, France, the UK, Canada, Mexico and of course, Australia. Therefore, the underestimation of the impact from reciprocal tariffs could be far-reaching and much more destabilising than currently pricing.From a trading perspective, the most interesting moves in the interim appear to be commodities. Because the scale and execution of US’s reciprocal tariffs will be a critical driver of commodity prices over the coming quarter and into 2025.Based on repeated signals from President Trump and his administration, reinforced by recent remarks from US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick. Lutnick has indicated that headline tariffs of 15-30% could be announced on April 2, with “baseline” reciprocal tariffs likely to fall in the 15-20% range—effectively broad-based tariffs.The risk here is huge: economic downturn, possibilities of hyperinflation, the escalation of further trade tensions, goods and services bottlenecks and the loss of globalisation.This immediately brings gold to the fore because, clearly risk environment of this scale would likely mean that instead of flowing to the US dollar which would normally be the case the trade of last resort is to the inert metal.The other factor that we need to look at here is the actual end goal of the president? The answer is clearly lower oil prices—potentially through domestic oil subsidies or tax cuts—to offset inflationary pressures from tariffs and to force lower interest rates.‘Balancing the Budget’Secretary Lutnick has specified that the tariffs are expected to generate $700 billion in revenue, which therefore implies an incremental 15-20% increase in weighted-average tariffs. We can’t write off the possibility that the initial announcement may set tariffs at even higher levels to allow room for negotiation, take the recently announced 25% tariffs on the auto industry. From an Australian perspective, White House aide Peter Navarro has confirmed that each trading partner will be assigned a single tariff rate. Navarro is a noted China hawk and links Australia’s trade with China as a major reason Australia should be heavily penalised.Trump has consistently advocated for tariffs since the 1980s, and his administration has signalled that reciprocal tariffs are the baseline, citing foreign VAT and GST regimes as justification. This suggests that at least a significant portion of these tariffs may be non-negotiable. Again, this highlights why markets may have underestimated just how big an impact ‘liberation day’ could have.Now, the administration acknowledges that tariffs may cause “a little disturbance” (irony much?) and that a “period of transition” may be needed. The broader strategy appears to involve deficit reduction, followed by redistributing tariff revenue through tax cuts for households earning under $150K, as reported by the likes of Reuters on March 13.The White House has also emphasised a focus on Main Street over Wall Street, which we have highlighted previously – Trump has made next to no mention of markets in his second term. Compared to his first, where it was basically a benchmark for him.All this suggests that some downside risk in financial markets may be tolerated to advance broader economic objectives.Caveat! - a policy reversal remains possible in 2H’25, particularly if tariffs are implemented at scale and prove highly disruptive and the US consumer seizes up. Which is likely considering the players most impacted by tariffs are end users.The possible trades:With all things remaining equal, there is a bullish outlook for gold over the next three months, alongside a bearish outlook on oil over the next three to six months.Gold continues to punch to new highs, and its upward trajectory has yet to be truly tested. Having now surpassed $3,000/oz, as a reaction to the economic impact of tariffs. Further upside is expected to drive prices to $3,200/oz over the next three months on the fallout from the April 2 tariffs to come.What is also critical here is that gold investment demand remains well above the critical 70% of mine supply threshold for the ninth consecutive quarter. Historically, when investment demand exceeds this level, prices tend to rise as jewellery consumption declines and scrap supply increases.On the flip side, Brent crude prices are forecasted to decline to $60-65 per barrel 2H’25 (-15-20%). The broader price range for 2025 is expected to shift down to $60-75 per barrel, compared to the $70-90 per barrel range seen over the past three years.Now there is a caveat here: the weak oil fundamentals for 2025 are now widely known, and the physical surplus has yet to materialise – this is the risk to the bearish outlook and never write off OPEC looking to cut supply to counter the price falls.
Quick search
CLOSEThe Dirty 15 and the ‘liberation’ of what?

Related Articles
.jpeg)
.jpeg)

Recent Articles
.jpeg)
Currency markets in June are being shaped by the re-steepening of the US Treasury yield curve, safe-haven demand and diverging monetary policy paths.
The Federal Reserve remains on a hawkish hold, while the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) is managing renewed inflation pressure and the Bank of Japan (BOJ) continues to navigate a wide yield gap against the US. That mix has kept the US dollar supported, left the Japanese yen under pressure, and made AUD/JPY one of the key crosses to watch.
All US release times below are Eastern Time unless stated otherwise.
Quick facts strip
DXY context
Well supported near the 100 level on safe-haven and yield demand
Strongest currency
US dollar (USD), supported by sticky inflation and high yields
Weakest currency
Japanese yen (JPY), pressured by yield divergence and energy import costs
Main central bank theme
Policy divergence as markets reassess rate-cut expectations
Main catalyst ahead
FOMC and BOJ meetings on 16 to 17 June 2026
Leaderboard
Strongest mover: US dollar (USD)
The greenback reasserted its position as a yield and safe-haven asset. The US Dollar Index (DXY) regained the 100 level as inflation and tariff uncertainty kept rate-cut expectations muted.
Key drivers
- Robust growth: Robust economic data, with first-quarter gross domestic product (GDP) expanding at an annual rate of 2.0%
- Sticky inflation: Rebounding inflation, with the consumer price index (CPI) rising to 3.8% in April
- Safe haven: Safe-haven demand linked to Middle East shipping disruption and Strait of Hormuz toll risks
June events to watch
• 5 June, 8:30 am ET | 10:30 pm AEST: Employment Situation, including non-farm payrolls (NFP)
• 10 June, 8:30 am ET | 10:30 pm AEST: CPI
• 16 to 17 June: Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting
• 17 June, 2:00 pm ET | 4:00 am AEST (Next Day): FOMC statement and projections
• 17 June, 2:30 pm ET | 4:30 am AEST (Next Day): Fed Chair press conference
Why it matters
Traders are watching the 17 June FOMC decision for updated projections and guidance on the policy path. The Federal Reserve calendar lists the 16 to 17 June FOMC meeting, with the statement scheduled for 2:00pm ET and the press conference for 2:30pm ET on 17 June. On the downside, any unexpected de-escalation in Middle East tensions could see energy prices fall sharply, which may cool part of the dollar’s inflation premium.
Weakest mover: Japanese yen (JPY)
The yen has faced heavy downward pressure, trading near the closely watched 160 level against the US dollar as the yield gap remains difficult to ignore.
Key drivers
- Yield spread: A wide yield disadvantage against the US dollar
- Import stress: Rising import costs for essential energy and food
- Carry trade: Speculative yen selling as carry traders focus on the rate spread
June events to watch
• 16 to 17 June, Tokyo time: BOJ monetary policy meeting
• 24 June, 8:50 am JST | 9:50 am AEST: Summary of Opinions
Why it matters
Traders are monitoring the risk of direct intervention from Japan’s Ministry of Finance if yen weakness becomes disorderly. The BOJ’s 2026 schedule lists a monetary policy meeting for 16 to 17 June, and notes that Summary of Opinions releases are generally published at 8:50am JST. A surprise shift in BOJ guidance, a rate increase, or a sudden risk-off liquidation in global assets could trigger a short squeeze and drive the yen sharply higher.
Most important cross: AUD/JPY
AUD/JPY remains one of the clearest expressions of yield divergence and energy asymmetry. Australia is a major commodity exporter, while Japan is a large energy importer. That means higher energy prices can create very different macro pressures for each side of the cross.
Key drivers
- Energy split: Higher oil prices may support Australia’s commodity-linked sentiment while increasing Japan’s import burden
- RBA path: RBA policy expectations remain sensitive to domestic inflation and labour market data
- BOJ factors: BOJ policy expectations remain sensitive to yen weakness, imported inflation and official intervention risk
June events to watch
• 16 June, 2:30 pm AEST | 12:30 am ET: RBA monetary policy decision statement
• 16 June, 3:30 pm AEST | 1:30 am ET: RBA Governor media conference
• 16 to 17 June, Tokyo time: BOJ monetary policy meeting
• 24 June, 11:30 am AEST | 9:30 pm ET (Prev. Day): Australia monthly CPI indicator
• 30 June, 11:30 am AEST | 9:30 pm ET (Prev. Day): Minutes of the June RBA Monetary Policy Board meeting
Why it matters
If the RBA keeps a restrictive bias while the BOJ moves cautiously, AUD/JPY could remain supported by carry demand. If the BOJ shifts more hawkishly in June, or if commodity prices such as iron ore weaken sharply, AUD/JPY could face a rapid corrective pullback. That keeps the cross on the watchlist for traders using the GO Markets forex CFDs platform.
The data to watch next
The Bureau of Labor Statistics lists the Employment Situation report, providing the clearest baseline picture of structural US labor market health.
April metrics showed CPI climbing to 3.8%; this updated release serves as a prime indicator for core service stickiness and tariff disruptions.
Wholesale input metrics scheduled for publication by the BLS, tracking the wholesale side of the current sticky inflation environment.
RBA monetary policy decision statement release, followed explicitly by the Governor media conference at 3:30pm AEST to unpack restrictive settings.
A critical central bank cluster. Highlights include the 17 June US policy statement (2:00pm ET) and press conference (2:30pm ET) alongside Tokyo's interest rate spreads.
Key levels and signals
-
◆
DXY 100
A psychological and technical line for USD strength, backed firmly by safe-haven demand and high yields.
-
◆
USD/JPY 160
A closely watched ceiling for potential official intervention risk from Japan's Ministry of Finance if price shifts become disorderly.
-
◆
AUD/USD 0.7202
Near-term resistance if risk sentiment remains constructive and commodity exports demonstrate structural resilience.
-
◆
US 10-year Treasury yield 4.5%
A technical baseline that may increase pressure on equity valuations if sustained, reflecting the broader structural re-steepening of the curve.
Bottom line
Global FX moves in June are set to remain highly sensitive to rate expectations, energy prices and geopolitical developments.
The US dollar’s dual role as a yield and safe-haven currency continues to offer support, while the yen remains exposed to carry demand and intervention risk. AUD/JPY sits at the intersection of those forces, making it one of the cleaner ways to track the policy and energy split across the region.
For traders, the key issue is not only which central bank moves next. It is whether inflation, oil and yields keep moving in the same direction, or whether a policy surprise forces a rapid unwind.
Follow FX through the Asia session
Stay close to Asia-Pacific themes, regional data, sentiment and key crosses.
.jpeg)
The US economy enters June in a complex environment where high interest rates, trade tariff policy and elevated energy prices continue to shape market expectations.
The Federal Reserve’s target range sits at 3.50% to 3.75%, while markets are watching how new Fed Chair Kevin Warsh frames the path ahead. The next Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting on 16 to 17 June could be an important test for rate expectations, especially while Brent crude remains above US$100 per barrel and the US-Iran ceasefire continues to hold.
Fed Funds Rate
3.50% to 3.75%
Next FOMC
16-17 June 2026
Brent Crude
Above US$100/bbl
Key June data events
6 major releases
Growth, business activity and demand
Real gross domestic product (GDP) increased at an annual rate of 2.0% in the first quarter of 2026, supported by private investment and exports. However, some sectors are feeling the squeeze from trade tariffs and elevated transport costs, which may be starting to weigh on forward order books.
June data to watch
What markets are watching
- Resilience in business investment for advanced technological equipment
- Revisions to consumer spending trends under the “K-shaped” economic divide
- The impact of newly announced Section 122 tariffs on import volumes
- Signs of corporate margin compression in retail and industrial sectors
Why it matters: Stronger-than-expected growth data may support US Treasury yields and the US dollar, potentially keeping pressure on equities. Softer growth data, by contrast, could lower interest rate expectations and weigh on the US dollar, which may support growth-sensitive stocks.
Labour, payrolls and employment data
The US labour market continues to navigate a “low-hire, low-fire” equilibrium. Recent indicators suggest the hiring pace may be slowing as firms adapt to higher financing costs.
June data to watch
What markets are watching
- Whether net payroll additions remain in the 100,000 to 150,000 range
- Movements in the unemployment rate
- Revisions to prior months’ employment data
- Wage growth trends through average hourly earnings
Why it matters: A stronger-than-expected NFP print may lift US Treasury yields and support the US dollar, while capping equity valuation multiples if rate cut expectations move lower. A weaker-than-expected jobs report could weaken the US dollar, lower bond yields and support rate-sensitive assets such as gold.
Inflation, CPI, PPI and PCE
Inflation remains the central market risk. Energy prices, tariffs and services inflation are all feeding into expectations for how long the Fed may need to keep policy restrictive.
June data to watch
What markets are watching
- The PCE price index as the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge
- Second-round effects from elevated fuel costs on core services
- The extent to which tariff-related import costs are passing through to consumer goods
- Business pricing behaviour in the monthly PPI data
Why it matters: Cooling inflation data may lower Treasury yields, weaken the US dollar and support gold and stock indices. Sticky or accelerating inflation could reinforce a higher-for-longer policy stance, which may support the US dollar and pressure Treasuries.
Policy, trade and geopolitics
Trade policy remains a major wildcard. The temporary 10% blanket tariff under Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974 is scheduled to terminate on 24 July, leaving markets to assess whether temporary surcharges could be replaced by longer-term Section 301 tariffs. That path could influence international supply chains, import costs and corporate margin structures.
June events and themes to monitor
Themes to monitor this month
- Progress of negotiations on Strait of Hormuz shipping protocols
- Congressional debate over the extension of corporate tax cuts
What markets are watching
Markets will be watching whether the Fed leans into inflation control, acknowledges growth risks, or keeps its language deliberately balanced. Policy signals may matter as much as the rate decision itself. If the statement, projections or press conference suggest the Fed is becoming more concerned about inflation persistence, Treasury yields and the US dollar could remain supported. If the Fed gives more weight to slowing activity, rate expectations may move lower.
Key watchlist summary
- Top data point: May CPI on 10 June at 8:30 am ET | 10:30 pm AEST
- Top policy event: FOMC statement on 17 June at 2:00 pm ET | 4:00 am AEST (Next Day)
- Top risk event: Strait of Hormuz transit disruptions
- Wildcard: Section 122 tariff adjustments
- Earnings watch: Late-quarter retail releases
- Key threshold: US 10-year Treasury yield above 4.5%
- Next FOMC: 16 to 17 June 2026
Bottom line
June puts the US market narrative back on inflation, rates and policy credibility. The Fed is not only managing the level of interest rates. It is also managing the market’s confidence that inflation risks from oil, tariffs and wages can stay contained.
For traders, the key issue is whether June data supports the higher-for-longer story, or whether softer growth and labour signals begin to pull expectations in the other direction.
.jpeg)
The Asia-Pacific region enters June 2026 navigating a sharp break from traditional economic cycles. Escalating energy costs linked to the Strait of Hormuz managed access regime are colliding with China’s domestic policy shift and Australia’s restrictive monetary stance.
This environment of global disequilibrium means market participants may need to move from reactive management to active risk planning.
15th Five-Year Plan
Industrial upgrading and June activity data
Intervention risk
Ministry of Finance and the 160 level
June RBA decision
Inflation and labour market data
Managed access
Energy tolls
Chinese policymakers are focusing on the newly adopted 15th Five-Year Plan, which prioritises industrial upgrading, technological self-reliance and “new quality productive forces”. The plan outlines major strategic tasks to reduce reliance on foreign firms, particularly in semiconductors, rare earths and biotechnology.
June data to watch- Stability in the manufacturing PMI after recovering above the 50.0 threshold
- Growth in industrial production and retail sales as domestic demand remains soft
- Policy support measures to manage structural property sector headwinds
China’s push for semiconductor and biotech self-sufficiency could alter the long-term demand structure for commodity-linked partners like Australia. Shifts in Chinese industrial output may influence regional trade flows and broader market sentiment, including index CFDs across the region.
The Japanese yen remains under pressure near the closely watched 160 threshold. This has raised market expectations for potential direct intervention by the Ministry of Finance, while the Bank of Japan (BOJ) navigates a divided policy environment.
June event to watch- Forward guidance from Governor Kazuo Ueda on the pace of interest rate normalisation
- Any indication of a possible rate increase, or a shift in guidance towards further normalisation
- Verbal intervention or direct action from the Ministry of Finance to support the yen
A narrowing yield differential between Japan and other major advanced economies could trigger a rapid unwinding of yen carry trade positions. Any unexpected hawkish turn from the BOJ may increase volatility across forex CFDs involving the yen.
Australia enters June with markets focused on whether inflation pressure is proving sticky enough to keep the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) on a restrictive path. Markets are also assessing how tighter monetary policy could interact with cost-of-living relief measures from the federal budget.
June data and policy events to watch- Whether monthly CPI continues to run above the RBA’s target band
- The RBA’s assessment of household consumption and private demand resilience
- Signs of labour market cooling as unemployment remains a key input for the rate outlook
The RBA’s cash rate decisions can influence borrowing costs and domestic equity valuations. If inflation continues to surprise to the upside, the board may feel compelled to tighten policy further, which could affect ASX index performance.
ASEAN supply chain shifts: Manufacturing activity continues to relocate to countries such as Vietnam and Thailand as companies look to manage maritime bottlenecks and trade-linked disruption.
Strait of Hormuz tolls: Iranian transit fees of up to US$2 million per vessel may act as an additional cost on regional energy imports if they persist.
Commodity-linked sentiment: Iron ore prices trading in the US$95 to US$105 range may continue to influence the Australian dollar, particularly if China-linked demand signals shift.
Key watchlist
Top China Data Point
NBS manufacturing PMI on 30 June at 9:30am CST
Top Japan Event
BOJ monetary policy meeting on 15 to 16 June
Top Australia Event
RBA monetary policy decision on 16 June at 2:30pm AEST
Key Australia Data Point
Monthly CPI indicator on 24 June at 11:30am AEST
Main Regional Wildcard
Scale of yen intervention operations
Most Sensitive Market
AUD/JPY
Key Threshold
Brent crude sustaining above US$100 per barrel
June begins with three policy stories pulling the region in different directions. China is leaning into industrial self-reliance. Japan is managing yen pressure and intervention risk. Australia is testing how far restrictive monetary policy can go while fiscal support works through the economy.
For traders, the key issue is not just which data point lands next. It is whether these regional pressures stay contained, or begin to reinforce each other through energy costs, currency volatility and trade-linked sentiment.
Watching Asia-Pacific moves today?
Track Asia-Pacific themes and monitor moves as they unfold.

