💹 A Quiet yet Turbulent Start to the Week — A Rare Market Setup Where Both Yen and Dollar Are Sold
[1] Equities: A Modest Rebound, but the “Heavy Atmosphere” Remains
Asian markets opened the week with a mild rebound,
and U.S. equity futures are holding in positive territory.
On the surface, conditions look calm — but investor sentiment remains unsettled.
Last week’s declines were too large to be dismissed as mere profit-taking.
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Nasdaq: -2.7% (weekly)
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Nikkei: -3.5%
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European stocks: broadly down over 3%
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Bitcoin: gave up much of its November gains in a sharp pullback
November is also a period of active fund rebalancing,
so it’s hard to say the “rush-to-exit selling” has fully stopped.
➡ Equities could still see wide swings again this week.
[2] Major Events Later This Week: Thanksgiving & Black Friday
The U.S. will enter a crucial part of the year-end shopping season:
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Thu — Thanksgiving
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Fri — Black Friday
Market interpretation is straightforward:
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Weak results → slowing consumption → recession fears → risk-off
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Strong results → resilient consumption → equity gains → yen selling
These two days could effectively determine the tone of December trading.
➡ Expect a quiet first half of the week — the real action begins later.
[3] FX: Yen Sold, Dollar Sold — A “Twisted Market Structure” Emerges
■ Tokyo Session: Almost No Direction
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USD/JPY: hovering in the mid-156s
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EUR/USD: 1.15 low
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GBP/USD: 1.31 level
Nervous trading but no clear trend.
■ London Open: The Mood Flips Suddenly
As European equities rebounded at the open,
markets shifted into an unusual pattern of “risk-on yen selling” and simultaneous dollar weakness.
● Cross-yen pairs surged across the board
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EUR/JPY: 180.80
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GBP/JPY: 205.44
Risk appetite returned, driving broad-based yen selling.
● EUR/USD also jumped
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Hit a high of 1.1534
Dollar selling + euro buying lifted the pair strongly.
● USD/JPY
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Climbed to 156.89
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Then stalled around 156.70
➡ A rare “triple move”:
USD/JPY up, EUR/USD up, EUR/JPY even higher.
[4] Germany’s IFO Index: Weak Data, but the Euro Hardly Moves
November IFO came in soft:
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Headline: 88.1 (below 88.5 forecast)
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Expectations: notably weaker
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Current assessment: slight improvement
Normally this would trigger euro selling —
but not today.
Euro remained firm, supported by:
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Rebound in European equities
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Ongoing dollar-weak tone
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Strong euro-buying momentum from last week
These factors completely shielded the euro’s downside.
[5] Key Focus Today: ECB Speakers Flood the Calendar
A wave of euro-related comments is expected from:
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Cipollone (ECB)
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Lagarde (ECB President)
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Nagel (Bundesbank President)
Additionally:
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U.S. 2-year Treasury auction
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Earnings from Zoom, Keysight Technologies, etc.
Small shocks could easily emerge from the European to U.S. sessions.
✔ Summary: Outward Rebound, Inward Distortion
Today’s market behavior can be summarized in one line:
“Yen weakness and dollar weakness coexist, leaving cross-yen pairs as the strongest segment.”
The combination of:
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Equity strength (→ yen selling)
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Dollar weakness (→ euro buying)
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Persistent yen selling pressure (→ stronger cross-yen)
creates a far more complex structure than it appears on the surface.
And the key takeaway:
➡ This rebound may simply be a reaction to last week’s crash — not a true trend reversal.
➡ Thanksgiving & Black Friday will be the “fate-defining” events of the week.
The most likely scenario:
A quiet start — and a volatile finish.


