
NFP 172K topples gold 200-day MA; all markets down
May nonfarm payrolls printed 172,000 jobs — nearly double the ~88,000 consensus — triggering a violent cross-market repricing on June 5, 2026: DXY surged to 100.07, the 10-year yield hit 4.537%, and every tracked commodity settled lower. Gold broke below the 200-day moving average for the first time since November 2023 (GCM6 −3.10% to $4,337.10). WTI CLN6 shed $2.50 to $90.54, Brent −2.04% to $93.09, copper −3.80% to $6.2635 ahead of Monday's Section 232 tariff, CBOT corn logged a sixth consecutive loss to 418.00¢, and soybeans extended to a four-month low at 1,122.25¢ with China's zero-buy streak at 114 days.

Friday's 8:30 AM jobs print ended the week's geopolitical macro narrative in two hours. May nonfarm payrolls came in at 172,000 — consensus was ~88,000 — and within minutes the dollar was through 100, the 10-year yield was pushing 4.55%, and every commodity on the board was heading lower. 1 Iran peace hopes, Hezbollah's rejection of the Lebanon ceasefire, Oxford Economics' September inventory-crunch warning — all of it stepped aside for the Fed repricing. Gold shed $138.70 to close below the 200-day moving average for the first time since November 2023. WTI settled at $90.54. Corn logged its sixth consecutive loss. China's soybean zero-buy streak reached 114 days.
Settlement snapshot — June 5 vs. June 4
| Contract | Settlement | Change | % Change | June 4 close |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NYMEX WTI Jul (CLN6) | $90.54/bbl | −$2.50 | −2.69% | $93.04 |
| ICE Brent Aug (BZN6) | $93.09/bbl | −$1.94 | −2.04% | $95.03 |
| COMEX Gold Jun (GCM6) | $4,337.10/oz | −$138.70 | −3.10% | $4,475.80 |
| COMEX Silver Jul (SIN6) | $68.943/oz | −$4.836 | −6.55% | $73.779 |
| COMEX Copper Jun (HGM6) | $6.2635/lb | −24.75¢ | −3.80% | $6.5110 |
| CBOT Corn Jul (ZCN6) | 418.00¢/bu | −6.50¢ | −1.53% | 424.50¢ |
| CBOT Soybeans Jul (ZSN6) | 1,122.25¢/bu | −6.50¢ | −0.58% | 1,128.75¢ |
Macro: the NFP print that flipped the Fed calculus
May nonfarm payrolls printed 172,000 jobs added — the third consecutive month beating consensus, against a ~88,000 estimate. 1 March was revised up 29,000 to 214,000 and April up 64,000 to 179,000, pushing the three-month average to roughly 188,000. Unemployment held at 4.3%. Leisure and hospitality added 70,000 — eclipsing healthcare's lead for the first time in over a year; local government added 55,000; financial activities shed 22,000. 8
The market reaction was immediate and broad:
- DXY closed at 100.07, up 0.66 points — just 0.57 points below its 52-week high — from 99.41 Thursday. 9
- 10-year Treasury yield settled at 4.537%, +6.2 basis points — the largest single-day gain since May 15, highest since May 22, seventh-highest of 2026. The 2-year rose to 4.160% from 4.043%; the 30-year reached 4.998%. 10
- December 2026 Fed rate-hike probability surged to roughly 68% from 51% the prior day; October odds moved to ~40%. 7
Capital Economics' Stephen Brown put the read plainly: the third consecutive consensus-beating gain "should further reduce FOMC concern about labor market downside risks" and makes it "increasingly likely that the FOMC will enact a couple of insurance hikes later this year." 1 Cleveland Fed President Beth Hammack, posting on LinkedIn after the release, said the labor market "appears to be roughly in balance" while inflation is "high, moving higher, and I believe persistently high inflation is the bigger concern." 8 Kansas City Fed's Jeffrey Schmid had framed the dilemma the prior day: "Our inflation numbers have probably crept up into the 3.50% range, which nobody likes. Is it temporary... Or do we act?" 1 After Friday's print, the "stay patient" side of that question is materially weaker. Warsh's first FOMC is June 16–17.
The equities complex reflected the same repricing: the Nasdaq dropped 4.18% (worst in months), S&P 500 fell 2.64% to 7,383.74, and chip stocks erased roughly $1.3 trillion in market value — their worst single-day loss in six years. VIX surged to 21.51, +39.68% on the session. 11
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Crude oil: peace hopes and a dollar surge collaborate on a $2.50 drop
WTI CLN6 Jul settled at $90.54/bbl, down $2.50 (−2.69%) from Thursday's $93.04. 2 The two-session decline since Wednesday's $96.02 high now totals $5.48 (−5.71%), the steepest two-day drawdown since May 27. Intraday range: $89.68 to $93.63; volume at 215,730 contracts was 141% of the 65-day average of 152,910. 12 The weekly outcome was still a gain — up $3.18 (+3.64%) from the May 29 close of $87.36 — the first weekly advance in three. 2
ICE Brent August (BZN6) settled at $93.09/bbl, down $1.94 (−2.04%), lowest since May 29. 3 The Brent-WTI spread narrowed slightly to ~$2.55.
Two forces drove the decline in parallel. The dollar and yield surge after NFP applied direct mechanical pressure on all dollar-denominated commodities. The geopolitical vector was simultaneously less bullish: ceasefire optimism around the US-brokered Israel-Lebanon framework — which dominated Thursday's selloff — gave way Friday to Hezbollah's flat rejection of the terms and Israel's continued airstrikes that killed at least 12 in southern Lebanon. 13 The directional effect for oil is bearish regardless: Lebanon ceasefire progress removes a proxy lever Iran could use to complicate Hormuz diplomacy, while Hezbollah's rejection restores that lever, yet both outcomes push traders toward a resolution scenario that reopens supply.
Sprague Energy's daily note captured the session dynamic: "The crude market will likely remain cautious ahead of the weekend and trade mostly sideways. It will look to the headlines for further direction as the market focuses on the increased hopes of a resolution to the conflict in the Middle East, while supply issues remain in the background." 14
Hormuz: still commercially closed, but the counting methodology is disputed
Bloomberg vessel-tracking data showed zero commercial ship transits through the Strait of Hormuz on the morning of June 5; June 4 logged just six transits (three in each direction). 15 CENTCOM, by contrast, has reported nearly 1,000 commercial transits since the April 8 ceasefire, using radar and satellite surveillance rather than AIS transponders. 16 The discrepancy stems from "dark transits": Vortexa estimates roughly 65% of outbound tankers turned off their transponders in May. Pre-conflict throughput was 100+ vessels per day; current visible throughput is under 5% of that. 15
Iran's parliament simultaneously received a triple-urgency bill to formalize economic, social, and security control over the Strait. The IRGC Navy has already been requiring tankers to obtain authorization before transiting. 17 US Secretary of State Rubio maintains that full Strait reopening is the non-negotiable first condition for any deal, and no upfront sanctions relief will be offered. 18
On the $24 billion question: Iran's Supreme Leader military adviser Mohsen Rezaei told CNN on Friday that any peace deal depends on the US releasing $24 billion in frozen Iranian assets, calling it "a test of trust that Iran wants to have with Trump — this is a test that America must pass and the path will be opened." 19
Supply backdrop: inventory clock still ticking toward September
Oxford Economics estimates OECD industrial inventories are draining at 146 million barrels per month. At that rate, stocks would reach the "technical minimum" of 2,308 million barrels — 52 days of forward demand — by mid-September. 20 Oxford's key threshold is not total exhaustion but "the point at which stock levels become low enough to trigger defensive behaviour among governments, refiners and traders." 20 Trafigura's H1 2026 results — net profit $4.1 billion, roughly triple the year-ago figure — estimated the conflict has removed more than 1.1 billion barrels from global markets; even a near-term peace deal would take months to restore production and shipping flows. 21 Chief Economist Saad Rahim: "The factors that have contained prices so far have bought the market time, but not a solution." 21
Floating storage fell from a March 22 peak of 184 million barrels to roughly 148 million barrels as of this week, with the drawdown rate accelerating from ~500,000 bbl/day earlier in the crisis to an estimated 710,000 bbl/day in recent weeks. 14 Goldman Sachs has flagged that diesel inventories could fall to a 20-day supply threshold by August. 14
Saudi Aramco July OSP: contradictory signals, no official confirmation
Saudi Aramco's July official selling price for Arab Light crude to Asia is disputed. A Facebook/AsiaOne post claims a $2.10/bbl increase to $6.50/bbl over Oman/Dubai quotes. At least five industry sources surveyed by Financial Express, Finimize, and others prior to the publication date projected a $3–$8/bbl decrease. No confirmation has appeared from Argus Media, Reuters, or Saudi Aramco directly. The OSP is typically published in the first days of the prior month; as of Friday's close it remains unverified. 22
OPEC+ meeting preview: June 7
The meeting two days out carries no new pre-meeting signals. The expected decision is a +188,000 bpd July quota increase matching June's increment. Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman met Russian Deputy PM Novak at SPIEF in St. Petersburg this week, with the Saudi side stating "the world needs every molecule of energy." Putin separately signaled Russia's willingness to assist in removing Iranian enriched uranium, as it did in 2015: "We are ready to provide assistance like we did in 2015." 23 With the Strait still functionally closed, the July quota is largely a target rather than deliverable supply for Gulf members.
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Gold: 200-day MA breaks for first time since November 2023
COMEX gold June delivery (GCM6) settled at $4,337.10/oz, down $138.70 (−3.10%) — the largest single-day dollar and percentage loss since March 26. 4 The weekly loss totals $223.40 (−4.90%), the worst one-week decline since March 20. For the year, gold is now up just $11.50 (+0.27%) — a 2026 that opened at $4,325.60 and briefly reached $5,318.40 on January 29 has essentially round-tripped, off 18.5% from its all-time high. 4
The 200-day moving average — approximately $4,428 — gave way on Friday. Marc Chandler of Bannockburn Global Forex marked the significance: "Gold looks heavy and the stronger-than-expected US jobs growth and the backing up in yields pushed the yellow metal back below the 200-day moving average (~$4428). It has not settled below it since Nov 2023." 24
Kevin Grady of Phoenix Futures and Options offered a different read on the selloff's character: "I don't think that you're seeing a massive amount of longs. I think you're seeing some speculative shorting here. The algos read the data and then they're pushing this thing lower." He sees a likely test of the March 23 low of $4,128 before a floor forms. 24 Spot gold closed near $4,328/oz, intraday low at $4,311.93. COMEX August open interest came in at 263,000 contracts — described by multiple analysts as "anemic."

The structural tug-of-war: central bank buying vs. speculative outflows
The selloff is happening against a still-intact central bank bid. World Gold Council data for April showed central banks bought a net 17 tonnes, returning to net purchases after March's pause. Poland added 14 tonnes to reach a record 543 tonnes; the PBOC added for its 18th consecutive month. 25 Global gold ETFs shed roughly $2 billion in May 2026 — Q1 ETF inflows of 62 tonnes were down 73% year-on-year. 25
Eugenia Mykuliak of B2PRIME Group characterized the dynamic directly: "I would not rush to perceive the current weakness as the beginning of a bear market. Instead, I would say that we are witnessing a so-called clash: short-term sales by investors vs. long-term strategic demand from states." 25 Robert Minter of abrdn looks for two bearish structural signals to confirm a break: governments prioritizing debt reduction (none are) or central bank buying materially declining (it hasn't). 25
Phillip Streible of Blue Line Futures called the break a "buyable dip": "It all depends on your investment timeline. In the short term, this break is bad, but I also see this as a buyable dip. Long-term fundamentals still point to higher gold prices." 25 His logic: real returns on bank deposits are negative (3.5% rates against inflation running toward 3.8%), so the rate-hike thesis doesn't yet make cash competitively attractive.
Clyde Russell at Reuters offered the macro framing: gold is now "inversely correlated with oil — higher oil raises rate expectations which hurts gold." He calls gold "as much a hostage to developments in the Iran war as other assets." 26 Technical targets being cited: Marc Chandler points to May's low near $4,367 as the next obvious level; Ole Hansen of Saxo Bank sees the March low of $4,099 as a viable near-term target; Fawad Razaqzada of FOREX.com puts $4,000 in view. 24 25
Silver's amplified move
COMEX silver July (SIN6) settled at $68.943/oz, down $4.836 (−6.55%) — the largest single-day decline since May 15, second-lowest settlement of 2026, fourth consecutive weekly loss. 5 Spot silver fell to roughly $67.90, and the gold-silver ratio widened to ~63.4 from ~60.6 Thursday. Silver's dual character — precious and industrial metal — compounded the selling: the rate-hike repricing hit precious demand while the equity risk-off hit industrial demand simultaneously. Streible framed it: "It's not just the labor market that is driving inflation. The war in Iran continues to support higher oil prices, and food prices are going higher. Inflation is becoming too big a problem for the Fed to ignore." 25
Copper: largest one-day drop since May 15 as tariff catalyst looms
COMEX copper June delivery (HGM6) settled at $6.2635/lb, down 24.75¢ (−3.80%) — the largest single-day decline since May 15, snapping a four-week winning streak. 6 The HGN6 July active contract showed a last price of $6.2550/lb; intraday range from $6.2465 to $6.5370 on volume of 60,120 contracts, 137% of the 65-day average. 27 The weekly loss of 9.60¢ (−1.51%) is the first weekly decline in four. Year-to-date copper is still up 63.35¢ (+11.25%), and remains within 6% of the June 2 all-time record of $6.6495/lb — just three sessions back. 6
The proximate cause is the same as for gold and oil: the dollar surge post-NFP mechanically pressures all dollar-priced metals, and the broad equity risk-off amplified the move. One additional complexity arrives Monday: the Section 232 50% tariff on copper imports becomes effective June 8. No confirmed stockpiling reports emerged ahead of the effective date, and the COMEX-LME arbitrage spread was unavailable Friday (LME remained Cloudflare-blocked). Canada announced a C$1.5 billion support package for steel, aluminum, and copper industries affected by the expanded Section 232 regime. 27
Grains: sixth loss for corn, fifth for soybeans; fund selling meets favorable weather
CBOT settlements
CBOT Corn July (ZCN6) settled at 418.00¢/bu (MarketWatch: 417.50¢), down 6.50¢ (−1.53%) from 424.50¢ Thursday. 7 The intraday range ran from 416.00¢ (low) to 424.50¢ (high) on volume of 261,420 contracts, 127% of the 65-day average of 206,120. Open interest stands at 637,862 contracts. 28 The six-session losing streak since May 28 totals −6.50¢ on the day, and corn has shed −11.25% over the past month; the contract is down 5.22% year-to-date.
CBOT Soybeans July (ZSN6) settled at 1,122.25¢/bu (MarketWatch: 1,121.50¢), down 6.50¢ (−0.58%), a four-month low. 7 Volume was 145,220 contracts, 123% of the 65-day average; open interest 372,177. 29 Soybean oil fell 217 points (−2.84%) in part dragged by WTI's slide, which reduces biofuel feedstock value. Five-session loss: −5.42%; one-month: −6.96%.
Fund liquidation across both contracts continues to dominate. StoneX estimates managed money sold roughly 133,000 corn contracts (~665 million bushels) and 71,000 soybean contracts (~355 million bushels) net in the past week, with Thursday alone accounting for approximately 50,000 corn and 32,000 soybean lots. 30 DTN's intraday commentary put it flatly: "Funds are still exiting longs and it hasn't mattered at all that markets are extremely oversold." 31
Brady Huck of EmpowerAg attributed the persistent selling to a shift in market character: "War and weather premium exiting the market in quick fashion. [It's a] full-on weather market, with outside macro market support fading." 7 Phil Flynn of Price Futures Group added: "The big crop narrative remains dominant. Traders are pricing in strong U.S. production potential with no major heat or drought threats materializing yet." 7
Weather: favorable Midwest forecast intact through mid-June
The NWS 5-day forecast (June 7–10) shows 0.5–2+ inches of rainfall across much of the southern and central Corn Belt — Iowa, Missouri, Illinois — with lighter amounts in Indiana and Ohio. 32 The 8–14 day outlook (June 12–18) continues above-normal precipitation for the entire Corn Belt with above-normal temperatures in central US. Ben Potter of Farm Futures noted: "Ample rains stretching from the Southern Plains through the eastern Corn Belt could deliver another 1" to 2" across a wide geography between Saturday and Tuesday." 30 Bruce Blythe added: "The favorable June weather outlook should allow crops to rebound from disappointing initial ratings." 32
The initial crop condition was poor — corn rated 67% good-to-excellent is the lowest debut since 2019. But with a warm, wet June shaping up, the production narrative is turning optimistic faster than the technicals would suggest.
Export sales: corn misses, China at 114 days
USDA's weekly export sales report (week ending May 28) showed corn net sales of 883,300 metric tons for 2025/26 — down 13% week-on-week and below the lower bound of the trade estimate range. 33 Soybean net sales were 276,900 metric tons (−8% w/w), in line with the estimate range. 33 Wheat logged net reductions of 642,200 metric tons for 2025/26 — a second consecutive week of heavy cancellations, led by Philippines (224,100 MT). New-crop wheat for 2026/27 added 838,500 MT. 33
China purchased zero US corn or soybeans for the 114th consecutive day. USDA's daily sales report on June 5 showed only the Philippines buying 190,000 metric tons of soybean meal. 34
The Vaden signal vs. the data gap
USDA Deputy Secretary Stephen Vaden reiterated confidence Friday that China will meet its 25 million metric ton annual soybean purchase commitment: "This year every indication that we have, whether it be data, whether it be the president's recent trip to China, whether it be conversations USDA has with our Chinese counterparts, every point of indication we have indicates they're going to meet that 25 million metric ton this year and going forward." 35 Vaden also cited an additional agreement for $17 billion in agricultural products on top of the Busan accord, with "details being worked out by the trade team." 35
The counter-read, from Don Roose of U.S. Commodities: the initial 12 million metric ton tranche "has happened," but the additional 8 million metric ton commitment "as far as on our information, has not ever occurred." 36 Roose's sequencing call for any Chinese purchases: "They buy sorghum first, maybe corn second, and in between time buying soybeans." 36 The next window to verify either view is Thursday's June 11 weekly export sales report and the accompanying WASDE.
Screwworm: containment holding, feeder cattle edge higher
USDA APHIS confirmed no new US screwworm cases as of June 5 — the single confirmed case remains the June 3 Texas calf. USDA has deployed 4 million sterile flies near the Texas detection point and continues weekly aerial releases of 100 million sterile flies in Mexico and along the border. Mexico's Nuevo León state showed active cases as recently as June 1–3, with the nearest site approximately 50 miles from the US border. 37 August feeder cattle settled at $353.90/cwt, up 52¢ (+0.15%); August live cattle at $241.65, up 12¢. 38
USDA APHIS: "Isolated detections outside of the known affected areas in Mexico are not unexpected, and the fact that they have been identified and addressed quickly show that our collaborative efforts with Mexico to implement the NWS Action Plan are working." 37
Macro dashboard — June 5
| Indicator | Reading | Change | Context |
|---|---|---|---|
| DXY (US Dollar Index) | 100.07 | +0.66 pts (+0.66%) | Near 52-week high of 100.64; day range 99.16–100.11 |
| 10Y Treasury yield | 4.537% | +6.2 bp | Session high 4.552%; highest since May 22 |
| 2Y Treasury yield | 4.160% | +11.7 bp | From 4.043% Thursday; policy-sensitive tenor |
| 30Y Treasury yield | 4.998% | +9 bp approx. | Approaching the 5.0% psychological level |
| May NFP | 172,000 | vs. ~88K consensus | Third straight consensus beat; 3-mo avg ~188K |
| Unemployment rate | 4.3% | Unchanged | |
| Dec 2026 Fed hike probability | ~68% | From ~51% Thursday | Oct 2026: ~40% |
| Nasdaq Composite | 25,709.43 | −4.18% | Chip stocks worst day in 6 years; ~$1.3T erased |
| S&P 500 | 7,383.74 | −2.64% | |
| VIX | 21.51 | +39.68% |
Catalysts ahead
Wednesday June 10 — EIA weekly petroleum status + weekly ethanol report: The first EIA data since June 3. Ethanol production as of June 3 ran 1.108 million bbl/day with inventories −362,000 bbl to 24.606 million bbl; the June 10 read will indicate whether biofuel demand is absorbing the corn crop or softening.
Thursday June 11 — USDA WASDE + weekly export sales (8:30 AM ET): The principal data event for grains. June 11 is the earliest date that any Chinese soybean purchases made after May 28 can appear in official USDA data — the report that will either corroborate Vaden's confidence or confirm Roose's skepticism about the 8 million MT additional commitment. The WASDE carries June supply-demand estimates for corn, soybeans, and wheat.
Monday June 8 — Section 232 copper tariff effective (12:01 AM): The 50% tariff takes effect at the open. Watch for COMEX-LME spread widening or tightening as arbitrage mechanics adjust and any late-stage stockpiling reports that didn't surface Friday.
Sunday June 7 — OPEC+ ministerial meeting: Expected to confirm the +188,000 bpd July quota increase. The meeting's market impact is primarily in the communiqué language — any shift from the steady-increment schedule or reference to UAE's April departure would signal a strategic pivot.
Monday June 16–17 — FOMC meeting: Warsh's first rate decision. Friday's NFP materially strengthened the case for a hike signal, if not a hike itself. May CPI on June 10 will be the final major data input before the meeting.
Cover image: AI-generated illustration
参考来源
- 1Reuters (Howard Schneider): US job report strikes a hawkish note as Fed's Warsh takes the baton
- 2DJ Market Data via Morningstar: WTI settlement
- 3DJ Market Data via Morningstar: Brent settlement
- 4DJ Market Data via Morningstar: Gold settlement
- 5DJ Market Data via Morningstar: Silver settlement
- 6DJ Market Data via Morningstar: Copper settlement
- 7DJ Market Data / WSJ via Morningstar: Daily Grain Highlights
- 8Yahoo Finance (Jennifer Schonberger): Strong May jobs report will keep Fed focused on inflation
- 9MarketWatch / ICE: DXY Overview
- 10DJ Market Data via Morningstar: 10-Year Treasury Yield
- 11Kitco NewsWire: Gold and silver tumble after hot jobs print
- 12MarketWatch: CLN26 Overview
- 13BBC News: Hezbollah rejects US-backed Israel-Lebanon ceasefire
- 14Sprague Energy: Oil Market Trades Lower as Ceasefire Hopes Raise Prospects
- 15Transport Topics / Bloomberg: Hormuz Traffic Remains Near Zero
- 16gCaptain / Bloomberg: US Counts Far More Hormuz Transits Than Commercial Tracking Shows
- 17IranWire: Triple-Urgency Hormuz Bill
- 18Shipping Telegraph: US — Hormuz opening first condition in talks
- 19Iran International: Khamenei aide ties US deal to $24B frozen assets
- 20bne IntelliNews: Inventory drawdowns mask Hormuz disruption
- 21gCaptain: Trafigura Warns World's Largest Energy Crisis Is Far From Over
- 22OilPrice.com: Latest Energy News
- 23CNN: June 4 live updates — Iran-Trump war news
- 24Kitco News (Ernest Hoffman): Wall Street brimming with bears after gold's breakdown
- 25Kitco News (Neils Christensen): Gold breaks below key technical support
- 26Reuters (Clyde Russell): History suggests gold will drop more
- 27MarketWatch: HG00 Copper Continuous Contract
- 28MarketWatch: C00 Corn Continuous Contract
- 29MarketWatch: S00 Soybeans Continuous Contract
- 30Farm Progress / Farm Futures: Afternoon market recap (Ben Potter)
- 31DTN Progressive Farmer: Periodic Updates on Grains, Livestock
- 32Farm Progress / Farm Futures: Morning grain analysis (Bruce Blythe)
- 33USDA FAS: Weekly Export Sales
- 34Kluis Commodity Advisors: Export Sales
- 35Brownfield Ag News: USDA deputy secretary confident China will honor soybean commitments
- 36Brownfield Ag News: Analyst — China has met some commitments, not all
- 37USDA APHIS: Current Status of New World Screwworm
- 38Brownfield Ag News: Closing Grain and Livestock Futures June 5
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