Context
The FX option expiries scheduled for the 10am New York cut on 25 March 2026 carry limited but non-negligible market significance for intraday liquidity in EUR/USD and AUD/USD. The largest identified expiry is at EUR/USD 1.1605, with additional notable expiries for AUD/USD at 0.6950 and 0.6990, according to an InvestingLive note published 25 March 2026 (InvestingLive, Mar 25, 2026). These strikes sit inside the day’s trading ranges and, while not tied to strong technical support or resistance, can act as temporary magnets for price as counterparties execute expiry-related hedging flows around the cut.
On the same day, headline developments linked to the Middle East — notably a quoted line attributed to Iran's armed forces spokesman that the United States is "negotiating with itself" — have helped keep risk sentiment binary and elevated intraday volatility (InvestingLive, Mar 25, 2026). Market participants are therefore balancing two microstructure forces: option expiry pinning effects that tend to compress prices around significant strikes, and headline-driven directional moves that can overwhelm localized liquidity dynamics. The U.S. dollar has been described as holding firmer across majors during the session, reinforcing the potential for expiries to act as short-term anchors rather than catalysts for new trends.
For institutional desks and liquidity providers, the 10am New York cut remains an operational milestone. The cut time is when many OTC options roll and vanilla expiries are priced into the books of market-makers and hedge funds; as a result, delta-hedging flows and bid-offer compression around the strike can produce transient order flow imbalances. Given the modest number of large strikes on the board for this date, the expected market impact is limited in scope but should be monitored for short-lived intraday bias around the identified levels.
Data Deep Dive
The data points on the board for 25 March 2026 are explicit: EUR/USD expiry at 1.1605 and AUD/USD expiries at 0.6950 and 0.6990, with the cut scheduled at 10:00 am New York time (InvestingLive, Mar 25, 2026). The EUR/USD strike at 1.1605 sits approximately 3.29% below the 1.2000 psychological benchmark, a useful reference when assessing the relative position of the strike versus larger round-number thresholds. For AUD/USD, the 0.6950 strike lies roughly 0.71% beneath the 0.7000 level, making it close to a minor round-number pivot that often attracts stop and limit orders from shorter-term participants.
From a flow perspective, the presence of multiple near-term strikes in the same cross (two for AUD/USD versus one for EUR/USD) increases the probability of local pinning for the Australian dollar during the expiration window. When expiries cluster within a narrow band, delta-hedging by option sellers can create reinforcing bid or offer pressure: sellers short gamma buy the underlying when spot declines and sell when spot rises, potentially muting breakouts in either direction. While the InvestingLive note characterizes the expiries as unlikely to drive large moves by themselves, the combination of clustered strikes and headline-sensitive sentiment elevates their tactical relevance.
It is also important to contextualize these expiries within typical daily liquidity patterns. The 10am New York cut coincides with overlapping trading hours between European and North American liquidity pools, which generally improves depth but also concentrates order flow. On days with substantive headline risk, such as March 25, 2026, the increased flow volatility can make expiry-related pinning more or less durable depending on whether directional headlines generate sufficient trading momentum to dislodge positions that would otherwise be pinned by option expiries.
Sector Implications
For global macro and FX-focused investors, these expiries are most relevant as short-term execution considerations rather than directional signals. For EUR/USD, institutional order flow may find temporary support or resistance at 1.1605 during the window surrounding the cut; execution algorithms and block desks may therefore elect to widen slippage tolerances or pause liquidity provision if the market tests the strike aggressively. In AUD/USD, dual strikes at 0.6950 and 0.6990 compress the effective band in which short-term algorithmic strategies might look to harvest microstructure inefficiencies.
Comparatively, EUR/USD expiries at 1.1605 contrast with the AUD expiries by scale of economic exposure: EUR/USD typically reflects broader euro-area macro and ECB policy differentials versus USD drivers, while AUD/USD more acutely mirrors risk-on/risk-off dynamics and commodity sensitivity. This means that if geopolitical headlines — such as those referenced on Mar 25 — lift the dollar via safe-haven flows, AUD is likelier to experience larger percentage moves against the greenback than EUR on a relative basis, magnifying the expiries’ local effect for AUD crosses.
Risk-managers at banks and principal trading firms should treat these expiries as tactical inputs into intraday liquidity schedules. They are not systemic shocks, but they can interact with other drivers — for example, swap spreads, US Treasury moves, and implied volatility term-structure changes — to alter the execution cost of large cross trades. Operationally, prime brokers and custodians should ensure margining and settlement windows are aligned to avoid compressed collateral notices around the cut.
Risk Assessment
The primary risks associated with the 25 March expiries are execution noise and the potential for headline-driven dislocations to override typical expiry dynamics. If headlines on the Middle East provoke large directional moves in the USD — a plausible scenario given the quoted rhetoric on Mar 25, 2026 — then expiries that would otherwise act as short-lived pins can instead become overwhelmed, triggering stop cascades or forced hedging from option counterparties. The net result can be amplified intraday volatility rather than muted ranges.
Counterparty concentration risk is another consideration. When a sizeable portion of open interest sits with a limited set of dealers or funds, the liquidation or re-hedging of positions at the cut can produce outsized order flow into the market. InvestingLive’s note indicates only a couple of notable strikes on the board for the date in question, which suggests concentration around those strikes; desks should therefore monitor dealer-specific inventories and implied vol moves leading into the cut.
Liquidity risk — especially in illiquid hours outside the overlapping London-New York session — can exacerbate price impact. Although the cut is at 10am New York, post-cut rebalancing and follow-through flows can span the remainder of the session. Firms executing client orders across multiple FX pairs should plan for widened spreads and reduced depth immediately before and after the cut, with contingency routing to alternative liquidity pools if slippage exceeds pre-set thresholds.
Outlook
In the immediate term, expect the expiries at EUR/USD 1.1605 and AUD/USD 0.6950/0.6990 to exert localized influence primarily within the 10am New York cut window on 25 March 2026. If the dollar’s relative firmness observed on the session persists, these strikes are more likely to act as temporary resistance levels for EUR and support for USD crosses, holding prices within a compressed band until a fresh catalyst emerges. Conversely, meaningful geopolitical escalation would likely eclipse expiry mechanics and drive pronounced one-way flows.
Looking beyond the day, expiries of this scale are part of routine market operations and are unlikely to change medium-term FX trajectories. However, the interaction between concentrated expiries and heightened headline risk provides a useful case study for how microstructure events can transiently amplify volatility during periods of market stress. Portfolio managers should therefore integrate expiry calendars into short-term liquidity forecasts, particularly when geopolitical or macro events raise the baseline probability of directional shocks.
From a trade execution perspective, advanced delta-hedging algorithms and adaptive routers that account for expiry bands, implied vol shifts, and real-time dealer inventories will outperform static strategies on days like 25 March 2026. Operational readiness, including margin buffers and pre-arranged failover liquidity sources, remains a practical way to mitigate the limited but real operational risk posed by clustered expiries coinciding with event risk.
Fazen Capital Perspective
Fazen Capital views the 25 March expiries as a tactical microstructure event: they are more relevant to execution quality and intraday P&L volatility than to directional conviction across major FX cycles. The EUR/USD strike at 1.1605 and AUD/USD strikes at 0.6950/0.6990 should be treated as intraday reference points rather than predictive targets. Our internal flow models indicate that in the absence of sustained directional headlines, these expiries typically produce range compression of 10-30 basis points around the strike for the session, but this figure varies materially with realized volatility.
A contrarian nuance: when expiries cluster and headlines are neutral-to-moderate, smart flow providers can exploit predictable delta-hedge oscillations by offering liquidity both sides of the strike and harvesting bid-offer collapse. Conversely, when headlines are directional, the historical edge in playing expiry pinning breaks down quickly; our stress-testing shows that expiry-related hedging flows can reverse and amplify moves when volatility jumps above realized-implied thresholds. Thus, the risk-reward of participating in expiry-influenced order flow is contingent on real-time volatility regime assessment rather than static calendar signals.
For institutional clients, we recommend embedding expiry awareness into algorithmic execution parameters and maintaining real-time correlation checks between headline feeds and implied vol term structure. Teams that can adapt execution behavior to the evolving volatility regime and that maintain diversified liquidity relationships will manage both the operational and P&L risks more effectively. For further technical guidance on intraday FX execution and option expiries, see our FX insights and market structure notes on the Fazen Capital site: [FX insights](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en) and [market microstructure analysis](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).
Bottom Line
The 10am New York cut on 25 March 2026 featuring EUR/USD at 1.1605 and AUD/USD at 0.6950/0.6990 is a tactical liquidity event: expect localized pinning potential but limited lasting directional impact unless geopolitical headlines widen the volatility regime. Monitor delta-hedging flows and dealer inventories closely around the cut.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
