Oil Breaks $74 and Tokyo Sheds 2%, but the Fear Gauge Slips Again: London Opens a Divided Tape
Crude jumped almost 5% and Japan took the hit, yet gold fell and the volatility gauge dropped. The supply-risk story is finally in the price, but the fear is not. London has to pick a side.
1. Asian Session Recap
Asia did exactly what a market pricing an energy shock does: it split. The oil importers were sold and the rest held up. The Nikkei 225 (JP225) fell around 2% to roughly 67,190, the single sharpest move of the session, as a near 5% jump in crude landed straight on the cost base of an economy that imports almost all of its energy. India’s Nifty 50 (NIFTY) eased about 0.25% to near 24,150 after a June inflation print, the same importer sensitivity in a milder form. Singapore’s Straits Times slipped around 0.2%.
The other half of the region leaned the other way. The Hang Seng (HK50) added roughly 0.3% to near 24,260 and the China H-share measure rose about 0.65%, with mainland-facing names shrugging off the oil headline. The ASX 200 (AUS200) held near 8,800, steadied by its energy and materials weight while the broader risk tone softened. The read is clean: this was not blanket risk-off, it was a rotation out of the economies that pay for oil and into the ones less exposed to it.
2. What the Week-Open Note Called Against What Happened
Sunday’s week-open note, “Oil Tests $73, the Fear Gauge Prints 15,” set the region a single test. Its exact line was that “crude that opens and holds above $73 tells you the market is re-pricing supply risk, and that would pressure importers such as Japan and India.” Asia handed back the confirmation in full. Crude did not just hold $73, it broke it, printing near $74.90, and the two named importers, Japan and India, were the two weakest markets on the board. On the central mechanism, the note was correct.
Where it was wrong is just as instructive, and it is the reason today is not a simple risk-off day. The note leaned on two fear tells that never fired. It called gold “the cleanest tell if fear returns,” expecting it to hold its shelf near 4,114; instead gold fell about 0.75% to near 4,073. It called the yen the region’s “early-warning system,” expecting a sharp bid if risk soured; instead the yen barely moved. So the supply-risk call was Confirmed, but the fear-broadens call was Reversed. The market re-priced oil as a cost, not yet as a crisis, and it paid the safe-haven bid to the dollar rather than to gold or the yen.
3. Iran and Hormuz: the Live Catalyst
This remains the axis the whole week turns on. The weekend sequence of strike, retaliation, a disputed ceasefire and conflicting messaging on the Strait of Hormuz was the reason the week-open note warned that so little fear was in the price. Overnight the market started to close that gap the hard way. Crude West Texas Intermediate rose about 4.9% to near $74.90, its highest of the run, and Brent pushed near $79.60. Roughly a fifth of the world’s seaborne oil moves through Hormuz, so the tape is now paying a supply-risk premium it declined to pay on Friday.
The tell to watch into London is the gold and oil split. In a genuine fear event, oil and gold rise together and the dollar and the yen catch a bid. Overnight, oil rose alone: gold fell about 0.75% to near 4,073, silver dropped almost 2%, and the safe-haven flow went into the dollar, with the dollar index firmer near 101.10. That combination says the market is treating this as an energy-supply story it can price in crude, not a systemic risk it needs to hedge across the whole book. If gold turns and starts to climb alongside crude, that is your signal the character has changed from a cost shock to a fear shock, and the calm equity tape would be the last thing to re-rate.
Crude is up almost 5% on a live supply threat, yet the volatility gauge fell to a 15 handle and US index futures are only modestly lower. If Hormuz headlines turn again, the repricing across equities would be violent precisely because so little of it has happened. The oil market has moved; the fear market has not. Do not size as if both have.
4. London Session Setup
London inherits a heavy overnight backdrop. US index futures softened through the Asian session, with the US Tech 100 (NAS100) future off around 1.3% and the broad US benchmark future down about 0.6% from Friday’s cash close near record ground. That points to a modest gap lower for European cash opens, and the same oil-importer split that ran through Asia should repeat across the Continent.
The standout is the FTSE 100 (UK100), near 10,497. Its heavy weighting in energy majors and defensive commodity names turns a crude spike into a tailwind, so it should hold up better than its neighbours and can even trade green while the rest of Europe leaks. The DAX 40 (GER40), near 25,067, sits at the other end: an export and industrial index that wears higher oil as an input cost and carries the most sensitivity to weak US futures. The Euro Stoxx 50 (EU50) and the CAC 40 (FRA40) sit between the two, closer to the DAX in temperament than the FTSE. There is no first-tier Eurozone data on the tape today, so direction is set by the oil price, the US futures drift, and positioning ahead of Tuesday’s US inflation print.
With crude driving a genuine sector split, the London edge sits in relative value rather than pressing a single index. The energy-heavy UK benchmark against the oil-consuming Continental indices expresses the exact story the tape is trading, and it carries far less exposure to a single Hormuz headline than an outright long or short on either leg.
5. FX Focus
The dollar is the quiet winner of the overnight and it frames every London pair. The dollar index sits firmer near 101.10. That leaves EUR/USD softer near 1.1404, down about 0.26%, and GBP/USD near 1.3379, down about 0.27%, both giving back ground rather than trending hard. For the London cross, EUR/GBP near 0.8521 keeps sterling marginally the firmer of the two majors, consistent with the FTSE’s relative resilience on the oil bid.
In the Asia-driven pairs, the signal is the dog that did not bark. USD/JPY held near 162.28, essentially unchanged, so the yen offered no haven bid even as crude spiked and Japanese equities fell 2%. The Australian dollar softened to near 0.6934 despite the firmer commodity complex, which tells you risk appetite, not the oil price, is setting the tone in the crosses. A yen that stays weak and an Aussie that keeps leaking is the profile of a market pricing a cost shock, not a crisis. Watch the yen first if that changes.
6. Key Levels for the Session
Levels are session references, not signals. Crude is extended after a near 5% move, so chasing strength carries poor odds; wait for the pullback. Position against your own plan and risk limit, not against a single number.
7. Economic Calendar
Today is a positioning day. The heavy releases sit on Tuesday, which stacks the US inflation print against the new Fed Chair’s first congressional testimony and the opening of bank earnings, led by JPMorgan, on the same morning. Times are shown for New York, London and Tokyo.
No first-tier Eurozone or UK release is scheduled for today, so oil and the US futures drift set the London tone until Tuesday’s data block.
8. How the Session Could Break
Probabilities sum to 100% and describe how we frame the distribution, not a forecast of one outcome.
9. Position Sizing
The overall posture stays defensive. For this specific session we lean REDUCED, because the reward for pressing size is small when the oil market and the fear market are telling two different stories and Tuesday can reconcile them in either direction.
10. Guidance by Experience Level
11. Disclaimer
This is analysis for the Monday London session, framed on Friday’s closing marks, the overnight Asian session, the live geopolitical backdrop and the published calendar. It is a preview, not personalised advice, and not a recommendation to buy or sell any instrument. Markets carry risk, leverage magnifies it, and you are responsible for your own decisions and risk limits. Levels and scenarios can be invalidated by a single headline in a session like this one. Do your own work before you act.