The Hormuz Trade, the Gold Surge and AMD at $400 — Wednesday Setup Radar
Three things happened overnight that changed the shape of Wednesday’s trading session. Crude collapsed 13 per cent on Hormuz de-escalation, closing out the geopolitical premium that had been baked in for weeks. Gold surged to $4,731 — nearly $180 off Tuesday’s close — as capital rotated hard into hard assets with the inflation-risk story removed from crude. And AMD printed after hours above $400 for the first time in its history, up 15 per cent, taking the chip complex with it into Wednesday’s open.
Any one of those moves on its own would be enough to reshape the setup table. All three together, with FOMC Minutes arriving at 18:00 UTC, makes Wednesday one of the more event-dense sessions of the year. The radar below works through each instrument, ranks by conviction, and gives you the exact levels that matter.
Wednesday Morning Snapshot
Those minutes were drafted when crude was above $100. The market now needs to decide whether to dismiss them as stale or whether a hawkish tone lands anyway. Every setup below has an FOMC scenario attached. Do not size full into any position that bleeds badly if the Fed delivers a surprise.
Setup 1 — Crude Oil Breakdown Continuation
Crude WTI — Hormuz De-escalation Removes the Bull Case
A 13 per cent collapse in a single session is not a routine rebalance. When a commodity that has been held up by a single geopolitical narrative loses that narrative, the unwind tends to be disorderly and persistent. Crude was at $102 before Hormuz. The supply-risk premium built over months came out in hours. The question for Wednesday is not whether crude continues lower — structurally it should — but whether the initial panic sell found any genuine demand.
The $89 level is not a support. It is where Tuesday’s session closed. Real structural support does not appear until the $84 to $86 zone, which was the consolidation band before the geopolitical premium started building. That is a further 3 to 6 per cent from current levels. The energy sector, which had been one of the stronger performers on the back of crude’s rally, is now the most exposed sector going into Wednesday’s open.
| Level | Type | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| $92.50 | Resistance | Previous consolidation / likely first seller cluster on any bounce |
| $89.00 | Current price | Tuesday’s close — no structural support here |
| $86.00 | Target 1 | Pre-Hormuz consolidation upper bound |
| $84.00 | Target 2 | Pre-Hormuz consolidation lower bound — full unwind target |
Bounce to $91 to $92 is sold. Continuation through $87 confirms the trend. Next stop $84.
FOMC Minutes more dovish than expected. Dollar drops. Crude bounces to $93. Watch for a close back above $91 before trusting the long.
| Parameter | Level |
|---|---|
| Short entry zone | $91.00 to $92.50 (bounce-sell) |
| Stop | $93.80 (above resistance, invalidates thesis) |
| Target 1 | $86.00 |
| Target 2 | $84.00 |
| Risk:Reward (T1) | ~2.8:1 |
| Position size | Reduce by 30% ahead of FOMC Minutes. Full size only after 18:00 UTC with no hawkish dollar surprise. |
Setup 2 — Gold Breakout Continuation
Gold (XAU/USD) — $4,731 With $4,800 in Sight
Gold added $175 on Tuesday to close at $4,731. That was not a crude replacement trade — it was a genuine safe-haven-meets-dollar-weakness move. The dollar broke through 98 to 97.65 while equities rallied and crude collapsed. That combination — falling crude, falling dollar, risk-on equities — is unusual, and it created a specific window for gold to do something it rarely does: rally into a risk-on session.
The prior resistance at $4,800 was identified in the macro framework as the ceiling on the current move. Tuesday’s close is $69 away from that level. With the dollar now below 98 and showing no obvious catalyst to recover strongly, the path to $4,800 is clear on the chart. The only thing that stops it is a hawkish FOMC Minutes reading that sends the dollar back through 98.50 and kills the gold bid.
Silver confirmed the move too, up 6.99 per cent on the session to $78.22. Copper added 4.44 per cent to $6.21. When all three move together, it is industrial plus safe-haven demand overlapping — that is the stronger signal than a gold-only move.
| Level | Type | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| $4,800 | Resistance / Target | Framework ceiling — macro consensus level |
| $4,731 | Current price | Tuesday’s close, near session high |
| $4,690 | Support | Intraday consolidation mid-point — first buying zone on pullback |
| $4,650 | Support 2 | Pre-breakout level — any dip here is a gift if dollar stays below 98.20 |
Dollar holds below 98.20. Gold consolidates $4,700 to $4,730 at the open, then grinds toward $4,800 through the NY session.
FOMC Minutes hawkish. Dollar spikes above 98.50. Gold sells to $4,650. That level buys again — watch for the re-entry.
| Parameter | Level |
|---|---|
| Long entry (pullback) | $4,690 to $4,710 on any early dip |
| Long entry (momentum) | Break and hold above $4,740 heading into NY morning |
| Stop | $4,648 (below $4,650 structure support, invalidates near-term thesis) |
| Target 1 | $4,800 |
| Risk:Reward | ~2.3:1 from mid-pullback entry |
| Position size | Up to full size pre-FOMC if dollar stays below 98.20. Half size if DXY above 98.20 into the minutes. |
Setup 3 — AMD Gap-Up and the Chip Complex Read-Through
AMD — $400 After Hours, Data Centre Revenue Beat
AMD printed above $400 in after-hours trading for the first time in its history, up 15 per cent on results. That is the event the options market had been pricing in as one scenario — the 8 per cent expected move was already the base case, and the result blew through it. Every institution that had bought puts into the earnings event is now sitting on losses. That institutional scramble to cover adds buying pressure into Wednesday’s open on top of the genuine fundamental move.
The read-through goes well beyond AMD’s share price. Data centre GPU revenue coming in strong validates the AI infrastructure thesis. NVIDIA, which was barely changed on Tuesday, opens Wednesday with a fresh reason to bid. The chip complex as a whole — AMD, NVDA, AVGO, QCOM — gets a re-rating catalyst. NAS100 pre-market at 28,015 was already up 1.31 per cent before the AMD number dropped. Wednesday’s open could extend that further.
The risk on AMD specifically is gap-fade. A 15 per cent gap on open in a stock with a well-documented history of fading initial reactions means the first 30 minutes are dangerous for pure long plays. The setup with better risk is to let the open print, watch for a pullback to the first VWAP anchor, and enter the confirmed continuation rather than chasing the gap.
| Level | Type | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| $415 to $420 | Extension target | First measured target above $400 break — gap extension |
| $400 | Pivot / VWAP anchor | Psychological round number — key hold level for bull case |
| $385 | Gap fill partial | Pre-earnings close area — likely first buy-the-dip cluster |
| $370 | Gap fill full | Invalidation if market decides the move was overdone |
Open above $400, pullback to $396 to $400, hold, then leg up to $415. Risk is tight — stop below $392.
Opens $405+, fades to $385 in first hour, stabilises. Longs wait for the $385 level to confirm before entering.
| Parameter | Level |
|---|---|
| Entry (pullback play) | $396 to $400 after open settles |
| Stop | $390 (below $392 structure, full invalidation) |
| Target 1 | $415 |
| Target 2 | $420 |
| Risk:Reward | ~2.5:1 from $398 entry to $415 target |
| Position size | Half size pre-FOMC. Risk is that a hawkish minutes reading hits the NAS100 and drags AMD down regardless of the earnings beat. |
Setup 4 — Dollar Weakness Plays (EURUSD and GBPUSD)
DXY 97.65 — Below the Key 98 Level That Changes Everything
The dollar breaking below 98 is not a small move. The framework had identified 97.00 as the structural support level — and the distance from 97.65 to 97.00 is narrowing. EURUSD closed at 1.1699 on Tuesday before the dollar move. With DXY now at 97.65, the simple mechanical effect is that EUR/USD and GBP/USD have room to run.
EURUSD’s next target once it clears 1.1720 is 1.18. GBPUSD’s target once it holds above 1.3500 becomes 1.36 and above — and the BOE rate decision Thursday means sterling has its own catalyst in the chamber. The dollar-weakness trade is one of the cleaner cross-asset setups today because it has multiple drivers: crude lower (removes inflation premium supporting the dollar), risk-on (reduces safe-haven demand), and the FOMC wildcard pointing in the right direction if the minutes read as stale.
| Pair | Close Tue | Key Level | Target | Stop | Bias |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EURUSD | 1.1699 | 1.1720 (break needed) | 1.1800 | 1.1650 | Long |
| GBPUSD | 1.3542 | 1.3500 (must hold) | 1.3650 | 1.3430 | Long (BOE catalyst Thu) |
| USDJPY | 157.90 | 157.50 (support) | 156.00 | 158.60 | Short dollar (watch carry) |
USDJPY at 157.90 is the outlier. Yen weakness has been persistent through the dollar weakness because the carry trade is still alive — Japanese institutional money has not rotated back home. A move back below 157.50 and toward 156 would be the tell that yen repatriation is starting in earnest. That is not the base case today, but it is worth monitoring if you are in any yen-related position.
Setup 5 — SP500 at 7,259 — Stretched, But the Squeeze Is Real
SP500 — 7,210 Floor Confirmed, 7,300 Ceiling in View
The SP500 closed at 7,259 on Tuesday after the squeeze fired. VIX fell to 16.45, the regime confirmed risk-on, and 996,000 net longs from institutional positioning were vindicated. Pre-market was printing 7,295 before the AMD numbers, which points toward an open attempt at the 7,300 ceiling the macro framework has set.
The stretched part of the picture is the options structure. SPY closed at $723.77 with max pain at $718. That is a $5.77 gap above pain with price pre-market at $731.42 — nearly two per cent stretched. When price runs this far above the pain level, market makers who sold calls are hedging by buying the underlying. That buying is mechanical, not fundamental. It runs out. Once it does, the gravitational pull toward $718 reasserts. That does not mean the market falls — it means the risk is asymmetric into FOMC time.
The floor is 7,210. Any news-driven dip that holds above 7,210 is buyable. A close below 7,210 after FOMC would change the setup table for Thursday entirely.
| Level | Significance | Action |
|---|---|---|
| 7,300 | Macro ceiling — framework resistance | Partial profit zone if long from lower |
| 7,260 | Tuesday’s close — current price | Pre-FOMC anchor |
| 7,230 to 7,240 | Intraday support — first buy zone | Long entry on dip toward FOMC |
| 7,210 | Framework floor — must hold | Full conviction long if FOMC stale / dovish. Exit if FOMC hawks and this breaks. |
| 7,180 | Prior confluence zone | Only visited if FOMC genuinely hawkish — institutional buying expected here |
| Parameter | Level |
|---|---|
| Long entry | 7,230 to 7,240 dip zone (if available before FOMC) |
| Stop | 7,195 (below floor — thesis failed) |
| Target | 7,300 (ceiling test) |
| Risk:Reward | ~2.5:1 from 7,235 entry |
| Size rule | Half size into FOMC. Double only after 18:00 UTC if minutes dismissed as stale. |
Full Setup Summary Table
| # | Instrument | Bias | Entry | Stop | Target | R:R | Conviction |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Crude WTI | Short | $91 to $92.50 bounce | $93.80 | $86 / $84 | 2.8:1 | 65% — wait for bounce |
| 2 | Gold (XAU) | Long | $4,690 to $4,710 dip | $4,648 | $4,800 | 2.3:1 | 70% — dollar-led |
| 3 | AMD | Long | $396 to $400 pullback | $390 | $415 / $420 | 2.5:1 | 68% — wait for gap settle |
| 4a | EURUSD | Long | 1.1700 to 1.1720 | 1.1650 | 1.1800 | 2.0:1 | 62% — FOMC binary |
| 4b | GBPUSD | Long | 1.3500 to 1.3540 | 1.3430 | 1.3650 | 1.6:1 | 60% — BOE Thu catalyst |
| 5 | SP500 | Long | 7,230 to 7,240 dip | 7,195 | 7,300 | 2.5:1 | 58% — FOMC gate |
FOMC Minutes Scenario Analysis — 18:00 UTC
These minutes were written when crude was above $100. The market already knows this. If the tone is hawkish on inflation, the first question traders ask is: “Was that because of $100 crude?” If yes, the hawkish signal is dismissed as stale and the dollar stays weak. That is the base case — and it is bullish for everything in the setup table above. The risk is a surprise: language around labour market tightness, services inflation, or a Fed explicitly comfortable holding rates despite lower energy. That would be genuinely hawkish and would hurt the entire setup table simultaneously.
| Scenario | Dollar | Gold | Crude | SP500 | Probability |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Minutes stale / dovish tilt | 97.00 or below | $4,800 test | $86 continuation | 7,300 test | 55% |
| Minutes neutral — no signal | 97.50 to 98.00 | $4,700 to $4,750 | $87 to $91 | 7,240 to 7,280 | 30% |
| Minutes hawkish surprise | 98.50+ | $4,640 to $4,660 | $89 to $92 (crude bounces) | 7,180 to 7,210 | 15% |
Position Sizing Framework for Wednesday
The Rule: Two Phases
Every setup above sits in a world where a single catalyst at 18:00 UTC can reverse it. The sizing rule is therefore split into two phases.
Phase 1 (open to 17:45 UTC): Maximum 50 per cent of intended position size. You are positioning for the directional view but keeping room to respond. On gold and crude, where the directional case is strongest regardless of FOMC, you can stretch to 60 per cent. On SP500 and FX, stay at 40 to 50 per cent. AMD is the exception — if the gap is orderly and $400 holds in the first 30 minutes, that early confirmation reduces the FOMC risk on the position.
Phase 2 (18:00 UTC onwards): Minutes released. If the market’s reaction confirms the base case (dollar stays weak, gold holds, SP500 holds 7,240), scale to full size. Risk:Reward at that point improves because you have confirmation. If the minutes deliver a hawkish surprise, your half-size positions limit the damage. Use the 7,210 floor, $4,650 gold support, and $390 AMD level as your hard exits if the surprise scenario plays out.
What to Watch Besides FOMC
| Catalyst | Time (UTC) | Instruments Affected | Watch For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Disney (DIS) earnings | Pre-open | Consumer discretionary, NAS100 | Streaming margins — positive = sector tailwind |
| Uber (UBER) earnings | Pre-open | Consumer health read | Gross bookings — indicator of real consumer spend |
| AMD reports | After close | Semiconductor complex, NAS100 | +15% AH already confirmed — gap management is the game |
| ARM results | After close | Chip licensing chain | Guidance disappoints = AMD gains partially reversed |
| BOE rate decision | Thursday | GBPUSD, gilt yields | Vote split — 7-2 hold = dovish enough for cable selloff |
| Silver and Copper | All session | XAG, HG, commodity FX | Silver +6.99% confirms the metals move — watch for follow-through vs fade |
The Single Most Important Level on Wednesday
If you only watch one thing all session, watch DXY 97.00. Everything in the constructive case for Wednesday — gold continuing, SP500 holding, EUR and GBP advancing, crude staying pressured — rests on the dollar not recovering. As long as DXY holds below 98.20 heading into FOMC, the setup table is intact. If DXY recovers above 98.50 after the minutes, every position above needs to be reassessed. That is the single line that organises the entire day.
The secondary level is SP500 7,210. That is the floor. As long as price is above it, the squeeze is valid and the setup is long-biased. Below it, the session changes character.
Wednesday has the ingredients for one of the more directional sessions of the quarter. Three major setups with clear entries, a clean binary catalyst at 18:00 UTC, and a regime that is low-vol and constructive going in. Manage size into the catalyst, then press the trades that confirm on the other side.
Setup Radar | Wednesday 6 May 2026 | Member Edition. All analysis is for educational and informational purposes only. Nothing here constitutes financial advice. Past performance does not guarantee future results. All trading involves risk of capital loss.
Continue with Titan Protect
Continue with the daily framework.
Daily Pre-Asia, Pre-London, Pre-NY and Post-Close briefs across twenty-plus instruments. Indicator suite, Shield dashboard, Foundry library and live community. Today’s case study shows the read on the tape.
Core
£59/mo
Indicator suite plus daily framework reads.
Edge Popular
£109/mo
Core plus Shield dashboard and member-only briefs.
Elite
£179/mo
Edge plus weekly 1:1 call and early access to new tools.
Save 15% on annual billing
Want to see the framework in action? Free Explorer tier — no card required.
Join the live community: Discord channel · Shield dashboard
Education, not financial advice. Trade your own analysis.