Dollar Holds Steady as Stocks Drop on Iran News
When equity markets sold off sharply after President Trump said Iran shot down a U.S. helicopter over the Strait of Hormuz and signaled the U.S. would have to retaliate, the dollar barely moved. That divergence is itself a signal. In an environment where geopolitical headlines are driving sudden volatility across asset classes, the DXY's relative stability points toward a currency market that is working through longer-term structural setups rather than reacting to daily noise.
For currency traders, the more important story is not what the dollar did on the day. It is what the charts across DXY, USD/JPY, and USD/AUD are setting up - and why the highest-probability approach in each case is to wait for confirmed breaks rather than trade the initial move.
DXY: Watching for a Confirmed Breakdown
The DXY has been in a structurally weak position for months. On the weekly chart, price has retraced into a long-term upsloping trend line that connects lows dating back to April 2011. That line has been tested multiple times, and a bottoming tail has recently formed at that level, suggesting some buyers are still defending it.
The setup that matters most here is not a bounce. It is what happens if price breaks decisively below that trend line support. A weekly close below the long-term trend line would confirm the breakdown. From there, the next logical area of interest would be a retrace back up to the broken trend line, which would then act as resistance and offer a cleaner entry for further downside.
On the upside, the key levels are the recent pivot high near 109.97 and, further out, a downsloping trend line near 121. A push back toward 109.97 could signal a short-term reversal of a week or two. A push into the 121 resistance zone would carry higher conviction given the downsloping nature of that line - price would be running into both structure and trend pressure simultaneously.
On the daily chart, there is a zone near 100.585 - just above the psychological 100 level - where a significant sell-off originated. Price spiked into that area and never recovered, leaving buyers from that spike still underwater. On any short-term retest, that zone is likely to act as overhead supply and resistance, as those participants look to exit near breakeven.
USD/JPY: Two Layers of Resistance Converging
USD/JPY is presenting a technically interesting setup in the near term. On the daily chart, price has rallied back into the top of a prior long-range red bar candle - the kind of level that often acts as resistance because it marks the high-water mark of a significant sell-off session. Today's price action tested that level and pulled back, consistent with what that structure typically produces.
Just above it, a downsloping trend line connecting prior pivot highs comes in around 166.48 to 166.70 on the daily chart. That trend line has been tested twice from below, and a third test - which appears to be developing - technically favors a rejection and pullback.
The zone between current price and approximately 166.70 represents a potential short entry area, with the key risk being a confirmed close above the trend line. If price closes above that line, the structure shifts bullish - and the correct response is to reverse the bias, wait for a pullback to the broken trend line, and look for a bounce setup in the opposite direction. The trend line itself becomes the anchor either way.
USD/AUD: Bull Trap Structure Reinforces the Confirmation Rule
The USD/AUD chart offers perhaps the clearest illustration of why chasing breaks is a losing approach over time. On the weekly chart, price had pushed above a prior support zone - a level that had held twice before - appearing to confirm a breakout. But it never closed convincingly above it. Price crept back below, trapping buyers who had entered on the initial push. That is a textbook bull trap, and it has since pulled price back toward the converging weekly trend lines.
Today's price action brought USD/AUD back to approximately 1.4200 - right at the intersection of an upsloping weekly trend line and a downsloping trend line. That is a meaningful technical zone, and there are two short-term levels above it worth tracking. The first is a visible gap on the daily chart near 1.4234 - which can still matter in FX when it reflects a visible weekend or event-driven gap, and this one appears to qualify. The second is the prior pivot high from the bull trap itself at 1.4635, just over two percent above current price.
A sustained close above 1.4635 would shift the near-term read to bullish and open the door toward the next major upsloping trend line, another five percent higher. Below that level, the bias remains toward resistance and potential continuation lower.
Key Levels at a Glance
| Pair | Level | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| DXY | Long-term upsloping trend line (weekly) | Weekly close below confirms breakdown - retrace to line is next entry |
| DXY | 109.97 | Pivot high - short-term resistance on any bounce |
| DXY | ~100.585 | Prior sell-off origin - overhead supply/resistance on retest |
| USD/JPY | Top of prior long-range red bar (daily) | First resistance - pullback expected on test |
| USD/JPY | ~166.48-166.70 | Downsloping trend line - third hit favors rejection |
| USD/AUD | ~1.4234 | Daily gap fill - near-term resistance |
| USD/AUD | 1.4635 | Prior bull trap pivot - close above shifts bias bullish |
What to Watch
The unifying theme across all three setups is confirmation. The DXY breakdown only matters if price closes below the weekly trend line - not just pierces it. The USD/JPY short only makes sense while price holds below the downsloping trend line - not if it closes above it. The USD/AUD bear case stays intact unless 1.4635 gives way on a close.
Each of these is a conditional trade, not a directional call. The chart has identified the zone. What determines whether a position is warranted is how price behaves when it reaches that zone - whether it confirms or fails to confirm. That gap between a clean break and a trap is where many retail traders lose their edge. The discipline to wait for the close, and to reverse bias when the structure says to, is what separates consistent operators from reactive ones.
This article is intended for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. All trading involves risk. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Trading involves substantial risk. All content is for educational purposes only and should not be considered financial advice or recommendations to buy or sell any asset. Read full terms of service.
Trading involves substantial risk. All content is for educational purposes only and should not be considered financial advice or recommendations to buy or sell any asset. Read full terms of service.



