Asia open: Tariff tantrum nukes calm, panic selling back in play
|Any illusion of calm in Asia just got nuked. Trump’s latest tariff tantrum hits like a macro wrecking ball, torching what was left of risk appetite and plunging markets back into full-blown panic mode. Cross-asset flows are in chaos, and the only question on every desk this morning is: Is he really willing to light a global recession match just to redraw the trade map?
This isn't just murky — it's pure fog-of-war trading now. Vol’s exploding, and the risk desk managers are already circling. Shoulder taps are happening — traders being told to de-risk, reduce flow sizes, or just stand down completely. And when liquidity vanishes like this, you get those doom-loop spirals where a vanilla ticket rips a hole in the floor.
Even gold — normally your safety blanket — gets rolled over as traders hit it to raise cash. Classic margin-cover mode. Copper’s now bleeding for a fourth straight session. Textbook stress tape.
Asia’s bounce yesterday? Gone. Dead-cat folder. Japan led the fakeout on hopes of getting a front seat in U.S. trade talks, but that goodwill just got vaporized. We’re staring down the barrel of another risk-off day, and every session is about to feel like a live grenade roll.
This is a high-vol, no-room-for-error tape. If you're unsure, you're prey. The tariff game of chicken just hit full throttle. Until someone blinks, the only game is survival. Tight stops, sharp execution, surgical strikes — or stay on the sidelines. This is a market that eats hesitation alive.
Speculators are flooding into the usual FX havens — the Japanese yen and Swiss franc — and on the surface, that makes perfect sense. When volatility spikes and the tape turns ugly, JPY and CHF are the first ports of call. And in a “sell-everything” frenzy, the rush to defensive FX is textbook.
But here’s the nuance: this isn’t just about volatility — it’s about capital flow fragility. Liquidity matters, but so does your balance of payments. Countries dependent on foreign capital sit in the crosshairs of outflows and rising hedge ratios on long-duration exposure. That puts a dent in the dollar. Japan and Switzerland — with their surpluses — wear the crown right now.
So yes, for today, JPY and CHF outperform. Asia FX, EM, and commodity-linked currencies get hit hard. The big dollar? It grinds somewhere in between — buoyed by USD funding demand, but weighed down by capital flight fears.
Still, this is FX — nothing’s ever that clean.
Zoom in on Japan. If you’re pitching a new manufacturing plant there, and your main competitor is China — which just greenlights a weaker yuan despite record exports — then suddenly a stronger yen is a problem. Japan likely starts quietly shadowing the yuan’s trajectory to stay export competitive.
If Asia slides into competitive devaluation, watch that CNY-JPY correlation like a hawk. A synchronized FX downdraft marks the start of a new currency war — and in that case, even my favourite go-to mechanical haven ( JPY) might get pulled into the storm.
Every trader on the street is on full Yuan watch right now — and we’re no different. All eyes are on the daily fix to see just how much rope the PBoC is willing to give the market.
A slight pushback from the central bank — even just a marginally stronger-than-expected fix — could be enough to shift sentiment back toward more measured ground. That wouldn’t just cool off some of the panic selling in Asia FX, it might also throw a lifeline to broader global risk assets.
In a market where narrative is flipping on every headline, even a hint that Beijing wants to slow-walk the devaluation could help stabilize things. For now, we wait on the fix.
Information on these pages contains forward-looking statements that involve risks and uncertainties. Markets and instruments profiled on this page are for informational purposes only and should not in any way come across as a recommendation to buy or sell in these assets. You should do your own thorough research before making any investment decisions. FXStreet does not in any way guarantee that this information is free from mistakes, errors, or material misstatements. It also does not guarantee that this information is of a timely nature. Investing in Open Markets involves a great deal of risk, including the loss of all or a portion of your investment, as well as emotional distress. All risks, losses and costs associated with investing, including total loss of principal, are your responsibility. The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of FXStreet nor its advertisers.