|

Looking ahead to Q3: is Japan building up to a fiscal crisis, and can tech continue its rally?

The second quarter is ending on a high note. Stocks are higher across Europe, the oil price is falling, and expectations for Fed rate hikes are moderate as we lead up to Kevin Warsh’s speech on Wednesday, and the US payrolls report on Thursday. The second quarter has been dominated by stunning gains for chip stocks, and tech-heavy indices, a strengthening dollar that has sent the yen down to a 40-year low and shifting geopolitical risks that are playing out in commodity markets.

The key numbers for Q2 include:

  • A 59% gain for South Korea’s Kospi.
  • An 88% gain for the Philadelphia semiconductor index.
  • A 23% gain for the Russell 2000.
  • A 22.5% gain for the Nasdaq.
  • A 9% gain for the Eurostoxx 600.
  • A lowly  3% gain for the FTSE 100.
  • A 2.2% loss for the yen vs. the USD.
  • A 10% decline in the gold price.
  • A 15% decrease in the silver price.
  • A 30% fall in Brent crude.

These numbers tell a story. The AI trade is still robust, even if it has splintered in recent months, with the chip makers surging and the hyperscalers struggling. Physical commodities are out, in favour of tech indices. The US and Asia are leading the pack, while Europe lags, and a strong economic outlook in the US is boosting the smaller cap Russell 2000 index, which was also a top performer this quarter. The Dow Jones is ending the quarter at a record high above 52,000, which is another sign of US economic dominance.

While the rally in Asian stocks is almost exclusively driven by chip makers, and chip-linked stocks, the rally has broadened in the US, as growth prospects remain firm. The Atlanta Fed GDPNow model is predicting growth of 2.5% for the US this quarter, this justifies the shift in US interest rate expectations. Interestingly, the shift to a slightly more hawkish stance from the Fed is driven by growth prospects and not inflation concerns, as you can see from the sharp drop in some commodity prices in the last 3 months. With growth lagging elsewhere, it supports a divergence in monetary policy in Q3 and beyond, which could play out in the forex market later this year.

Diverging rate hike expectations are also playing out in the yen. It dipped to a 40-year low, and USD/JPY is above 162, and is rising again on Tuesday. This is intervention territory, and FX traders will be wary of what the Japanese authorities do next to try and stem the decline of the yen.

The market is punishing the yen for a few reasons: 1, the BOJ is not hiking interest rates fast enough, 2, the new government is being accused of a lack of fiscal discipline. The second point is important, the Japanese government has removed Ministry budget caps to meet its new growth framework, prioritizing ‘effective investment’ over spending caps. This is increasing concerns that Japan’s debt to GDP ratio of 260%, will only expand further. The government is also suspending some value added taxes, and the $2.3 trillion long-term investment road map is a gamble when the country is also drowning in debt.

The yen has fallen to multi-decade lows, at the same time as long-end Japanese bond yields have surged this quarter. The 10-year Japanese bond yield is higher by more than 30bps in the last 3 months, this compares with a 30bp decline in Italian yields over the same time frame, and a 13bp decline in UK bond yields of the same duration. When yields rise but the currency falls, it suggests fiscal stress is building.

Thus, as we move into Q3, the yen is worth watching. There is now an enhanced chance of intervention risk and excess yen volatility, combined with a growing risk of a fiscal crisis in one of Asia’s biggest economies.

Overall, trades made today will settle tomorrow, the first day of Q3, so today’s price action could give us a clue about what to expect over the summer months. The focus will also shift to central Bank speakers at the ECB’s conference in Portugal. So far, ECB members have sounded hawkish about inflation risks, but the main event will be Kevin Warsh’s speech on Wednesday. We may drift into the event risks coming up in the next few days. 

Author

Kathleen Brooks

Kathleen has nearly 15 years’ experience working with some of the leading retail trading and investment companies in the City of London.

More from Kathleen Brooks
Share:

Editor's Picks

GBP/USD stays weak near 1.3250 on resurgent USD demand

GBP/USD stays weak near 1.3250 in European trading on Tuesday, reversing a part of the previous day's advance to a one-week high. The pair ditches a three-day winning streak, undermined by the USD/JPY upsurge-led broad US Dollar rebound. US jobs data in next in focus.

EUR/USD keeps the red near 1.1400 on firmer US Dollar

EUR/USD remains in the red near 1.1400 in early Europe on Tuesday, snapping a three-day winning streak amid a firmer US Dollar. The pair trades with caution ahead of Germany's preliminary inflation readings and the US JOLTS Job Openings Survey.

Gold recovers early lost ground to YTD low; Fed hike bets and firmer USD to cap upside

Gold builds on its intraday recovery from the lowest level since November 2025, touched earlier this Tuesday, and climbs to the top end of its daily range heading into the European session. Any meaningful appreciation still seems elusive in the wake of a broadly firmer US Dollar. Against the backdrop of renewed Mideast tensions, mixed signals on US-Iran talks assist the USD to stall its recent pullback from the highest level since May 2025.

Ripple defends critical support, Stellar extends recovery

Ripple (XRP) trades around the key $1.00 psychological level, consolidating as the token awaits its next directional catalyst. Stellar (XLM) extends its recovery above $0.178 after posting modest gains at the start of this week.

US JOLTS Job Openings expected to show strong labor demand, endorsing Fed rate hike bets

The US Bureau of Labor Statistics will release the Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey for May on Tuesday at 14:00 GMT. Job openings are expected to come in at 7.3 million in May.

Kevin Warsh isn't expected to say much in Sintra: That's exactly why markets will listen

Financial markets could find an important catalyst in the enchanting, fairytale-like landscape of Sintra this week. The ECB Forum will, as it does every year, gather the crème de la crème of central banks. The new boss at the Fed, who has clearly said that the Fed should stop explaining everything, will need to talk – and traders should listen.