Gold rose to over US$3,500 but later decreased slightly below this level. This movement was driven by safe-haven flows and the anticipation that the Federal Reserve may soon reduce interest rates.
The US dollar increased in strength, leading the yen to weaken, with the USD/JPY rate exceeding 147.70. Bank of Japan’s Deputy Governor mentioned that rate hikes might be necessary, although the timing is uncertain. Additionally, Japan’s trade negotiator denied US pressure for lower agricultural tariffs and called for auto levy reductions.
Mixed Results in Asia-Pacific Stock Markets
In the stock market, Asia-Pacific indexes showed mixed results. Japan’s Nikkei 225 increased by 0.25%, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng rose by 0.1%. In contrast, the Shanghai Composite fell by 0.4%, and Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 declined by 0.2%. Traders are also preparing for an announcement by Trump scheduled at 2 pm US Eastern time.
Gold breaking $3,500 an ounce signals strong safe-haven demand, a trend we’ve seen build since the US GDP contracted in the second quarter of 2025. With August inflation figures showing a cool-down to 2.8%, expectations for a Federal Reserve rate cut in the fourth quarter are now firmly priced in. Derivative traders should look at long-dated call options on gold ETFs to capitalize on this monetary easing cycle.
The yen’s weakness above the 147 level against the dollar presents a classic carry trade opportunity, given the wide interest rate differential that has persisted since late 2024. The Bank of Japan’s vague timeline for future hikes suggests the path of least resistance remains a weaker yen for now. Traders might consider selling out-of-the-money JPY call options, collecting premium while betting the BoJ remains on the sidelines for another quarter.
Event Risk from Trump’s Announcement
The scheduled announcement from President Trump introduces significant event risk, especially concerning potential auto tariffs that could directly impact Japan and the broader Asian markets. We are advising traders to prepare for a spike in volatility, as the VIX index has already climbed from 18 to 22 over the past week on this uncertainty. This is an environment to buy volatility through straddles on the S&P 500 or the USD/JPY pair, rather than taking a firm directional view.
The divergence in Asian stock markets, with Japan’s Nikkei edging up while Shanghai falls, points to a clear split in sentiment following last week’s data showing Chinese industrial production at a two-year low. The weaker yen is providing a tailwind for Japanese exporters, a pattern we’ve seen hold throughout 2025. A potential pairs trade could involve going long Nikkei 225 futures while shorting Hang Seng futures to isolate Japan’s currency-driven strength from regional trade fears.