Trade Anytime, Anywhere
Important Information
This website is managed by Ultima Markets’ international entities, and it’s important to emphasise that they are not subject to regulation by the FCA in the UK. Therefore, you must understand that you will not have the FCA’s protection when investing through this website – for example:
Note: Ultima Markets is currently developing a dedicated website for UK clients and expects to onboard UK clients under FCA regulations in 2026.
If you would like to proceed and visit this website, you acknowledge and confirm the following:
Ultima Markets wants to make it clear that we are duly licensed and authorised to offer the services and financial derivative products listed on our website. Individuals accessing this website and registering a trading account do so entirely of their own volition and without prior solicitation.
By confirming your decision to proceed with entering the website, you hereby affirm that this decision was solely initiated by you, and no solicitation has been made by any Ultima Markets entity.
I confirm my intention to proceed and enter this website Please direct me to the website operated by Ultima Markets , regulated by the FCA in the United KingdomGlobal markets open today facing a potent mix of policy uncertainty and structural shifts. While Monday’s trading remained relatively calm, the major macro headlines driving market sentiment today reflect a sharp divergence between the U.S. (slowing growth) and Japan (rising rate-hike risk).
The ISM Manufacturing PMI report, released yesterday, painted a concerning picture for the industrial sector, challenging the narrative of broad economic resilience.
The persistent contraction underscores the pressure high interest rates continue to exert on the real economy. While negative for cyclical sectors such as energy and industrials, this “bad news” supports expectations for a December Fed rate cut, reinforcing demand for defensive assets.
In contrast to the U.S. data, BoJ Governor Ueda delivered a hawkish message in his speech yesterday. He indicated that the Bank of Japan is prepared to adjust policy—potentially through a rate hike—if underlying inflation accelerates. Ueda highlighted the BoJ’s monitoring of the new administration’s fiscal stimulus and its impact on prices.
Impact: This near-term rate-hike signal contrasts sharply with the Fed’s easing trajectory, placing downward pressure on USD/JPY as markets price in a narrowing U.S.–Japan interest rate gap in early 2026.
After the market insights, i want to add what to focus for today, cover on the gold, usdjpy, silver outlook
With the US economic data continuing to be delayed due to the earlier US shutdown, and the lack of economic releases, the focus shifts to how asset prices digest the divergence between the slowing US economy and the hawkish signals from Japan.
The pair faces renewed selling pressure as the policy gap threatens to narrow from both sides: the Fed cutting (due to weak ISM) and the BoJ hiking (Ueda’s hawkish comments).
The bias for USD/JPY could potentially shift to the downside. Ueda’s explicit warning about adjusting policy makes the Yen an attractive buy on any Dollar weakness.

USDJPY, Daily Chart | Ultima Markets MT5
Technically, USD/JPY remains in a bullish structure, but near-term downside still needs to be watched. The key levels to monitor are the 156.50–158.00 resistance range, a previous high found in January 2025, which could act as major resistance.
For now, traders can continue to monitor for any potential setbacks in USD/JPY in the near term.
Silver remains the market leader today, trading in “cleared” territory after the historic $58.00 mark.

XAGUSD, H4 Chart | Ultima Market MT5
Price action is now driven by pure momentum and market hype amid the structural shortage narrative. With no historical resistance overhead, the next target is likely psychological, with $60.00 now the next major magnet for bulls.
Meanwhile, pullbacks are still possible, with near-term support at $56.50 and $54.50 as major floors for the bulls.
Global markets are navigating a stark divergence in monetary policy signals. The U.S. ISM Manufacturing PMI confirms ongoing industrial weakness, reinforcing expectations for a December Fed rate cut and supporting defensive assets.
In contrast, the Bank of Japan’s hawkish stance signals potential rate hikes, creating near-term pressure on USD/JPY. Silver continues to rally on structural shortages and speculative flows, while Gold remains supported by broader risk-on sentiment and dovish Fed expectations.
Traders should focus on how USD/JPY reacts to policy divergence, monitor potential pullbacks in silver, and watch Gold’s technical levels as markets digest these conflicting signals.
Disclaimer
Comments, news, research, analysis, price, and all information contained in the article only serve as general information for readers and do not suggest any advice. Ultima Markets has taken reasonable measures to provide up-to-date information, but cannot guarantee accuracy, and may modify without notice. Ultima Markets will not be responsible for any loss incurred due to the application of the information provided.
Ultima Markets provides the foremost competitive cost and exchange environment for prevalent commodities worldwide.
Start TradingMonitoring the market on the go
Markets are susceptible to changes in supply and demand
Attractive to investors only interested in price speculation
Deep and diverse liquidity with no hidden fees
No dealing desk and no requotes
Fast execution via Equinix NY4 server