Crude Oil Cracks, Gold Glitters, USD/JPY Drifts as Soft US Data Hammers Yields

Published 16/05/2025, 05:14
  • US PPI fell 0.5% vs 0.2% gain expected—biggest drop in over a year
  • Retail control group and factory output also undershot forecasts
  • Yields dropped sharply; markets priced in two Fed cuts by year-end
  • Crude slumped on Iran nuclear deal talk
  • Gold bounced off trend support as dip-buyers stepped in aggressively

A string of softer-than-expected U.S. economic data prints on Thursday revived expectations for more rate cuts from the Federal Reserve, resulting in a big reversal in interest rate markets following heavy losses earlier in the week. Rather than fret about a potential US recession, cyclical stocks rallied, with capital shifting out of growth names that had outperformed in previous days.

While the rates and equities world were enthusiastic, the FX universe was disinterested—seemingly taking its lead from technicals rather than anything resembling fundamentals. Gold staged a dramatic bounce after hitting multi-week lows, while crude did the opposite on the prospect of even more supply hitting an already saturated market.

Downbeat Data Revives Rate Cut Bets

US Economic Data

Source: TradingView

Treasury yields fell sharply overnight as a batch of weaker-than-expected U.S. data pointed to a cooling economy and firmer prospects for Fed rate cuts. The standout miss came from producer prices, with final demand PPI unexpectedly falling 0.5% in April—well below the 0.2% rise expected. It was the largest drop in over a year. Core readings also undershot, hinting that upstream producers may be absorbing the impact of higher import tariffs, at least for now.

Factory output added to the gloom, slipping 0.4%—double the drop expected. The U.S. retail sales control group—which feeds into GDP calculations—slumped 0.2%, suggesting the threat of higher tariffs saw consumers bring forward spending into Q1.

All up, the data painted a picture of flagging demand and weakening momentum at the start of Q2, increasing the risk the Fed may have to deliver a string of rate cuts should it begin to drag on the labour market.US Rates Correlation Chart

Source: TradingView

Rate markets were bid on the back of the data, with the 2-year yield tumbling over 9bps to dip below 4%, the 10-year down nearly 8bps to 4.45%, and the curve steepening modestly as traders priced in two Fed cuts this year—most likely starting in September.

Equities didn’t need a second invitation to rally on the back of the rate move, led by cyclical sectors. Unusually, the FX universe showed little interest in the data, seemingly preferring to take its cues from technical rather than fundamental factors.

Outside of rates, the other big move on Thursday came from crude oil. WTI slid more than 2% as reports surfaced of a potential nuclear deal between the U.S. and Iran. A breakthrough could unlock sanctioned Iranian supply, giving oil bears fresh ammunition at a time when demand signals are softening.

USD/JPY Unwind Gathers SteamUSD/JPY-Daily Chart

Source: TradingView

USD/JPY remains one of the more interesting FX pairs out there right now, showing little relationship with traditional drivers like interest rate differentials and performance of riskier assets. Instead, technicals appear to be playing a bigger role in the yen’s movements, suggesting that should be the initial reference point for anyone contemplating setups involving the pair.

Having eked marginally into bullish territory, RSI (14) and MACD are now threatening to roll over, hinting momentum may be starting to shift to the downside. For now, both indicators sit in neutral territory, favouring a neutral bias that puts more emphasis on price action.

On the downside, levels to watch include 145, the uptrend dating back to the April lows, 144 and 141.65. Above, the 50DMA is found near 146 today—a level that has seen plenty of action over the past week. A break and close above the 50DMA may shift near-term directional risks higher, putting a potential retest of 148.70 on the table.

While Japanese Q1 GDP data will be released today, if recent form is any guide, it’s unlikely to deliver any meaningful market response. March quarter data looks like something from the distant past given how rapidly the macro environment is changing.

Crude Crunch on Possible Iran DealCrude Oil-Daily Chart

Source: TradingView

Crude oil delivered an obvious topping pattern on Thursday, completing a three-candle evening star while simultaneously breaking the uptrend dating back to the lows set on May 5. With momentum indicators looking heavy and shifting marginally into bearish territory, the bounce over the past fortnight may be on its last legs.

On the downside, $60.50, $57.70 and $55.13 are levels to watch. Above, crude has consistently struggled over the past month either side of $64, making it a level to watch should we see an unlikely squeeze higher.

Gold Bulls Deliver Powerful SignalGold Price-Daily Chart

Source: TradingView

Gold staged a powerful bounce off the December 2024 uptrend on Thursday, erasing losses of nearly 2% to close up nearly 2%. The scale of the move leaves little doubt that bullion remains a buy-on-dips play for now, putting greater emphasis on upside levels than down as we move towards the weekend.

$3270 looms as a barrier for those looking to extend the bullish move, with a break of that level putting $3367 potentially on the table. On the downside, $3168 remains a relevant level with the uptrend and 50DMA located just beneath it.

Thursday’s thrust has seen RSI (14) break the downtrend it was sitting in, pushing it back to neutral territory. MACD continues to trend lower but remains well above zero, providing a combined momentum signal that leans marginally bullish overall. Price action carries more weight at this juncture.

Have a great weekend!

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