United States (US) President Donald Trump claimed that last night, Iranians shot down a US military Apache helicopter while patrolling the Strait of Hormuz.
UOB’s Enrico Tanuwidjaja and Vincentius Ming Shen note that Indonesia’s FX reserves fell further in May as Bank Indonesia (BI) stepped up interventions to support the Rupiah, which has weakened sharply year-to-date.
Rabobank describes Canada’s economy as fragile, with back-to-back quarterly contractions marking a technical recession and weak investment and trade dragging growth.
Brown Brothers Harriman’s (BBH) Elias Haddad reports that USD/CNH is falling toward support at its June multi-year low as broad Dollar weakness combines with China’s stronger-than-expected trade surplus, driven by AI-related exports and semiconductor imports.
Commerzbank’s Charlie Lay explains that Korean authorities announced new measures to support the Korean Won, including tighter oversight of offshore FX derivatives, scrutiny of suspected misconduct, and expanded FX hedging by the National Pension Service via USD forward selling.
Societe Generale notes China’s trade surplus widened to USD 105.4 billion in May, driven by a 19.4% year‑on‑year surge in exports led by AI‑related equipment.
Brown Brothers Harriman’s (BBH) Elias Haddad notes that USD/IDR retreated sharply after hitting a fresh record high, as Bank Indonesia delivered an unscheduled 25 bps hike to 5.50%, following a surprise 50 bps move in May.
Royal Bank of Canada (RBC) economist Claire Fan argues that recent contractions in Canadian GDP do not signal a recession, noting that the C.D. Howe Institute Business Cycle Council shares this view. She emphasizes that sharp swings in population growth distort traditional GDP readings.
Private-sector hiring in the US has cooled in late May. The NER Pulse, which is the weekly companion to the ADP National Employment Report, shows that companies added an average of 29K jobs per week in the four weeks ending May 23.
Mexico reported that 12-month inflation rose by 3.94% in May, down from 4.45% previously and the 4.03% expected by market participants.
ING’s Frantisek Taborsky says Hungary’s May inflation at 1.8% year-on-year confirms an idiosyncratic disinflation story and makes a June NBH easing cycle “a done deal”, with an initial 25 bp cut to 6.00% and 75 bp total this year.
Societe Generale’s Kenneth Broux and colleagues note that EUR/CHF has formed a higher low near 0.9090 versus March’s 0.8980, signalling reduced downside momentum as the cross approaches its 200‑day moving average and a multi‑year descending trendline around 0.9240/0.9265.