U.S. Jobs Report Could Decide the Dollar’s Direction Volatility Risks Rise Amid Middle East Tensions and Intervention Fe

8 5月 2026, 11:30
Masayuki Sakamoto
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U.S. Jobs Report Could Decide the Dollar’s Direction

Volatility Risks Rise Amid Middle East Tensions and Intervention Fears

■ Market Overview

Today’s main event is the U.S. Non-Farm Payrolls report.

Current market expectations:

  • NFP: expected to slow sharply from +178K to around +65K

→ If labor market weakness is confirmed, USD selling could accelerate.

However:

if wage inflation remains strong,

the market may revive expectations for:

“Higher rates for longer”

which could trigger renewed USD buying.

→ A highly volatile reaction is likely depending on the outcome.


■ Current Market Structure

“A Triple-Theme Market”

Jobs Report + Middle East + FX Intervention

  • Weak employment data → USD selling
  • Middle East tensions → safe-haven USD buying
  • USD/JPY around 157–158 → intervention fears

→ Multiple themes are offsetting each other simultaneously.


■ FX Market Conditions

USD/JPY remains trapped in the 157–158 zone

  • Upside capped by intervention fears
  • Downside supported by dip-buying

→ The market remains extremely unstable and headline-sensitive.


■ Key Focus Areas

1) U.S. Employment Report

Markets will focus on:

  • NFP
  • Average Hourly Earnings
  • Unemployment Rate

→ The “quality” of employment data matters more than the headline number alone.


2) Trump Speech (1:00 AM Japan Time)

Markets are watching closely for comments regarding:

  • Middle East tensions
  • Tariffs
  • China policy

3) Middle East Developments

Headlines related to the Strait of Hormuz remain critical.


■ Possible Scenarios

Scenario 1 — Weak Employment Data

→ Rate-cut expectations rise
→ USD selling accelerates
→ USD/JPY moves lower


Scenario 2 — Strong Wages & Strong Employment

→ USD buying returns
→ USD/JPY retests 157–158 zone


Scenario 3 — Mixed Results (Most Likely)

→ Violent two-way price action
→ Choppy, unstable market conditions


■ Trading Strategy
  • Chasing the initial reaction is dangerous
  • Wage data matters more than usual
  • Be cautious with weekend exposure

■ Final Conclusion

This is:

“A market that cannot be decided by jobs data alone.”

Middle East headlines, intervention risks, and Trump-related comments are all moving simultaneously.

The key is not the first reaction —

but whether the move can sustain afterward.