As the Swiss National Bank prepares for its June 18 monetary policy assessment amidst external pressures and the constant threat of currency intervention, the USD/CHF pair faces a volatile week ahead. Simultaneously, markets are laser-focused on the June 16 and 17 FOMC meeting, the first under new Fed Chair Kevin Warsh, where a shift away from easing bias could trigger significant price movements in response to persistent US inflation concerns.
The USD/CHF pair faces potentially volatile conditions in mid-June, driven by US inflation data (June 10-11) and key central bank meetings scheduled for the following week. Markets are eyeing a potential hawkish pivot at the FOMC meeting on June 16-17, followed by the Swiss National Bank’s assessment on June 18. The SNB's readiness to intervene to weaken the franc1 adds to the high-stakes environment for traders.
Swiss National Bank meeting (SNB)
The Swiss National Bank (SNB) is scheduled to announce its next quarterly monetary policy assessment on June 18, 2026, amid a complex macroeconomic environment in which the central bank remains in a watchful, "wait-and-see" stance. Having maintained its benchmark policy rate at 0% at its March meeting — while keeping a 0.25 percentage point penalty charge on excess sight deposits — the SNB is balancing domestic inflationary pressures with major external pressures. While Switzerland's headline inflation has hovered near rock-bottom 0.1%, escalating geopolitical tensions in the Middle East and rising energy costs present a dual challenge: they threaten to push short-term global energy prices higher, yet they also trigger safe-haven flows that rapidly appreciate the Swiss franc2. Because an overly strong franc threatens the country’s export-driven manufacturing sector, the SNB has explicitly signaled an increased willingness to directly intervene in foreign exchange markets.
FOMC June 2026 meeting
The upcoming Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting scheduled for June 16–17, 2026, carries immense weight as it marks the first policy-setting session chaired by the newly sworn-in Fed Chief, Kevin Warsh. While the central bank is widely expected to hold the benchmark interest rate steady at its current 3.5%–3.75% range, the overarching narrative has dramatically shifted from cutting rates to actively managing inflation risks. Following an unexpectedly hot May jobs report and persistent commodity price pressures driven by the ongoing geopolitical conflict with Iran, market participants are bracing for hawkish changes. Wall Street analysts anticipate that the Committee will officially strip away the remaining "easing bias" language from its policy statement3 — a remnant of the late 2024 and 2025 rate-cut cycle—thereby opening the door for potential rate hikes later this year4. This pivot has already stoked political tensions, with President Trump publicly advocating for rate cuts just as traders begin to fully price in a quarter-point tightening by year-end, making the release of the updated Summary of Economic Projections (the "dot plot") and Warsh's debut press conference5 critical puzzle pieces for the summer's global market direction.
US inflation data on June 10–11 serves as a critical volatility catalyst ahead of the June 16–17 FOMC meeting. Stronger-than-expected prints would likely harden the Fed's hawkish stance under new leadership, fueling expectations of a rate hike later this year and potentially challenging USD/CHF at critical price levels.
USD/CHF daily chart technical analysis
- The chart's overall context indicates that the price is currently trading within a narrowing wedge formation, as indicated by the red lines. The wedge price action began in July 2025, and followed a downtrend which began in January of the same year (Blue line to the left of the chart).
- Price action is currently challenging the upper border of the wedge, which has so far acted as resistance throughout the entire wedge.
- A confluence of resistance lies above price action, represented by the intersection of the wedge's upper border (Red line) and the monthly R2 at 0.7971, just below the psychological level of 0.8000 and the weekly R1 at 0.8018.
- A confluence of support lies beneath the price action, represented by the intersection of the lower wedge border (Lower red line) and the monthly pivot point at 0.7826.
- Price action broke above a critical technical level, which, after the break, is acting as a confluence level of support range below price, lies mid-range of the wedge formation, represented by the intersection of monthly R1 of 0.7890, weekly pivot point of 0.7913, weekly S1 of 0.7858, the exponential moving average EMA9, and the simple moving averages, SMA9 and SMA21.
- Lagging indicator RSI14 is in line with price action, currently at 61, just below its overbought level.
- The latest Commitment of Traders (COT) report6 reveals a notable positive divergence between large speculators' positioning in Swiss Franc futures and the ongoing price action. Since early March 2026, large speculators have significantly reduced their all-time net short positions — from nearly -55,000 to -32,000 — while prices have continued to fall.
This article and its contents are intended for educational purposes only and should not be considered trading advice. Forex trading is high risk. Losses may exceed deposits.