Institutional FX Insights: JPMorgan Trading Desk Views 8/4/26
Macro / overnight
Big headline shift overnight: US/Iran have agreed a 2-week ceasefire, taking markets back from the brink for now.
The move happened fast and a lot of the initial price action was already on by the time Europe came in.
Core question this morning: do you chase the risk-on / USD lower move here, or assume we’re just setting up for the same problem again in two weeks?
House tone here is tactical rather than structural, but there is a growing sense that:
the escalation premium is coming out of the USD
and some “erratic US policy” premium may also need to come out
Market tone
Risk-on across markets
USD softer
But conviction is still capped by:
uncertainty around whether the ceasefire holds
lack of clarity on the Strait
concern this may just be a temporary political offramp
The desk read is that if the worst-case escalation is avoided, the USD can stay modestly offered from a flow/credibility perspective, even if it is not a clean “sell dollars against everything” environment.
FX themes by currency
EUR
EUR remains the preferred expression of tactical USD shorts.
The euro was already trading better than expected during the escalation phase, and now with the ceasefire it looks well placed.
Spot has pushed back above the moving average cluster around 1.1670–1.1690.
A close above that zone would be technically meaningful and suggest the market had become a bit too short EUR in recent weeks.
The author has re-engaged in EUR longs after missing the earlier topside move.
Takeaway: EURUSD is the cleanest way to play a near-term USD credibility / de-escalation unwind.
GBP
Sterling should benefit from the softer USD backdrop, but the view is that EUR is still preferred to express USD downside.
UK-specific constraints remain, especially with local elections on 7 May approaching.
Preference remains to stay long EURGBP and add toward 0.8680 if seen.
Cable resistance/watch zone: 1.3485 / 1.3500, the high since the conflict began.
Takeaway: GBP can rise with the backdrop, but upside may be more limited than EUR.
JPY
The ceasefire has reduced the urgency of defensive JPY longs.
The author has used the move to exit the remaining JPY longs and reset.
View now is that USDJPY may struggle to revisit 160 soon, but the cross-yen price action is still poor, which makes JPY longs less attractive tactically.
Also a Jiji story dampened expectations of a near-term BoJ hike, with pricing backing off.
If USD selling extends, supports are:
50d: 157.135
100d: 156.80
Takeaway: less conviction in JPY longs here; prefer expressing USD downside elsewhere.
CHF
Slightly puzzling price action: broader FX is trading the ceasefire as risk-positive, but EURCHF is not following through higher.
That feels inconsistent with:
yesterday’s reserve-data-driven bid tone
and the broader softer-USD / calmer-risk backdrop
Bias is to buy a dip toward 0.92, assuming ceasefire headlines remain constructive.
Takeaway: CHF underperformance still looks plausible if de-escalation sticks.
AUD / NZD
AUDUSD buy-on-dips is the preferred short-term strategy in the G10 beta space.
The ceasefire supports risk sentiment and should leave the USD offered on rallies in the near term.
Preferred AUDUSD buy zone: 0.7017 / 0.7043 Fibonacci retracement area.
RBNZ held rates, but the message was more hawkish than expected.
Governor Breman said the committee discussed hikes now or in May, signaling concern around inflation expectations.
That triggered a sharp AUDNZD reversal lower after new highs near 1.2200.
NZD has outperformed overnight, but faces technical resistance at 0.5846 / 0.5848, where the 100dma and 200dma sit.
Takeaway:
near term: AUDUSD dips are buyable
but NZD has become more interesting after the hawkish RBNZ surprise
CAD
The ceasefire has helped drag USDCAD back below 1.39.
Even so, the desk remains bearish CAD, especially on crosses, because:
Canadian growth concerns remain
broader underperformance persists
systematic selling of CAD has resumed
Key level below: 200dma at 1.3816
Takeaway: USDCAD can drift lower on the softer USD theme, but the bigger preference remains short CAD on crosses.
Positioning / trade color
JPY longs exited
Tiny cable shorts covered
EUR longs initiated / rebuilt
EURGBP longs retained
Tactical bias is now:
short USD selectively
especially vs EUR
while avoiding overcommitment given the ceasefire is only temporary
Flows
Overnight flow was notable for heavy USD selling from DHF and SHF
The DHF community appeared to favor EUR
In JPY, hedge-fund buying was seen, but it was offset by local corporate flow
In CAD, systematic sellers returned
Key levels to watch
EURUSD: moving average cluster at 1.1673 / 1.1690
EURGBP: add toward 0.8680
GBPUSD: 1.3485 / 1.3500
USDJPY: supports at 157.135 and 156.80
EURCHF: buy dip toward 0.9200
AUDUSD: buy zone 0.7017 / 0.7043
NZDUSD: resistance 0.5846 / 0.5848
USDCAD: 200dma at 1.3816
What clients should hear this morning
The immediate market read is de-escalation = softer USD, but this is a tactical trade, not full regime certainty.
Best expression of the move is still long EURUSD.
JPY longs are less compelling now that the immediate crisis premium is fading.
GBP should benefit, but EUR remains the cleaner vehicle.
In high beta, AUDUSD on dips looks attractive, while NZD has improved materially after the RBNZ.
CAD still underperforms on crosses, even if USDCAD softens.
Bottom line
Morning call bias is tactically USD-negative after the ceasefire, with EURUSD the preferred expression, EURGBP longs retained, JPY longs reduced, and AUDUSD dips buyable — but conviction remains guarded because the ceasefire is only a two-week pause, not a full resolution
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Patrick has been involved in the financial markets for well over a decade as a self-educated professional trader and money manager. Flitting between the roles of market commentator, analyst and mentor, Patrick has improved the technical skills and psychological stance of literally hundreds of traders – coaching them to become savvy market operators!