
Dollar Index Hits 98.60 as 3.8% US CPI Crushes Euro and Yen
Hot US inflation and retail sales data push the greenback to a two-week high, driving EUR/USD below 1.1710.
The US dollar surged across the board after April inflation hit 3.8% and retail sales beat estimates. Rising Treasury yields forced major currency pairs through critical technical support levels as markets repriced Federal Reserve rate expectations.
Headline US consumer inflation accelerated to 3.8% and retail sales climbed 0.5% in April, driving the US Dollar Index ($DXY) to a two-week high of 98.60 during the European session on Friday. The greenback rally pushed the yield on the US 10-year Treasury note to 4.00%, draining capital from non-yielding assets and forcing major currency pairs through critical technical boundaries. Data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics showed energy costs drove the inflation spike with a 17.9% year-over-year increase, solidifying the dollar yield advantage over rival currencies. The producer price index also delivered a massive upside surprise, printing at 1.4% and signaling that upstream price pressures will continue to flow into the consumer economy. This cpi" title="Understanding inflation and CPI in forex">inflation data overshadowed the recent Q1 US GDP report, which showed the economy expanding at a 2.0% annualized rate, missing the 2.3% market consensus but reflecting an 8.7% jump in gross private domestic investment.
EUR/USD Breaks 1.1710 Support Despite ECB Rate Hike Warnings
EUR/USD dropped 0.38% to trade at 1.1671, decisively breaking below the established technical support level at 1.1710. The euro faced intense selling pressure as the dollar's inflation momentum overpowered hawkish signals from European policymakers. European Central Bank Governing Council member Martins Kazaks warned on Thursday that the institution will likely raise interest rates if elevated crude oil prices continue to unmoor inflation expectations. Brent crude rose 1.26% to $107.05 per barrel today, while WTI crude increased 0.97% to $102.00 per barrel. Financial markets currently price in a 25-basis-point rate hike for the upcoming June ECB meeting, which would lift the deposit facility rate from 2.0% to 2.25% and the main refinancing rate to 2.40%. Traders aggressively sold the single currency because the 3.8% US CPI print guarantees the Federal Reserve will maintain restrictive policy longer than previously modeled, widening the transatlantic yield spread in favor of the dollar. The energy crisis in Europe continues to suppress euro valuations, with US retail gasoline prices climbing roughly 50% since the onset of the Middle East conflict.
USD/JPY Clears 158.00 as BOJ Hawkish Shift Fails to Dent Dollar
USD/JPY advanced 0.3% to clear the 158.00 handle, reaching 158.32 during Tokyo trade. The yen depreciated even after Bank of Japan Policy Board member Kazuyuki Masu stated that policymakers must raise the benchmark rate at the earliest stage possible to contain inflation. Masu previously voted to hold the policy rate at 0.75% during the central bank's divided 6-3 April decision. Former BOJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda publicly noted today that the effects of direct foreign exchange interventions rarely last long in the face of structural yield differentials. The 4.00% yield on US 10-year Treasuries continues to attract institutional capital away from Japanese assets, neutralizing the yen's domestic policy support. The Japanese currency traded near 157.85 per dollar earlier in the session before the US retail sales data triggered a fresh wave of dollar buying across the interbank market.
Pound Plunges to One-Month Low of 1.3398 Amid Risk-On Equity Rally
GBP/USD absorbed the heaviest losses among the majors, tumbling 0.94% to hit a one-month low of 1.3398 in London trade. The British pound sliced through the 1.3450 support floor, driven by dollar strength and domestic political jitters. The selloff materialized despite recent data from the Office for National Statistics showing UK real GDP grew by 0.6% in the first quarter of 2026, confirming a continued economic recovery following a 0.2% expansion in Q4 2025. Currency traders aggressively sold the sterling as the US economic data outperformance, highlighted by April Non-Farm Payrolls adding 115,000 jobs against a forecasted 65,000, reinforced the Federal Reserve's restrictive monetary policy stance. The currency market volatility occurred alongside a massive risk-on rally in global equities. The S&P 500 climbed 0.77% to close at a historic 7,501.24, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average added 370.26 points to reach 50,063.46. The Nasdaq Composite surged 0.88% to 26,635.22, fueled by strong earnings from Cisco Systems and Applied Materials. This divergence between a surging dollar and record-high equities indicates that international capital is flowing heavily into US dollar-denominated assets.
Gold Retreats to $4,612 as 4.00% US Yields Drain Commodity Bids
XAU/USD spot prices declined 0.82% to $4,612.99 per troy ounce, breaking below the recent $4,650 to $4,780 consolidation channel. The precious metal faced intense liquidation as US Treasury yields spiked, increasing the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding bullion. Silver suffered an even sharper correction, retreating $1.10 to trade at $86.81 per ounce after recently tagging a two-month high near $90.00. The rapid repricing in the metals market caused the gold-to-silver ratio to compress from 62 to 55 over the past week before today's dollar-driven reversal. In the broader commodity space, global copper futures fell 1.50% to $6.54 per pound, and soybean futures plummeted 3.50% to $1,186.00 after Chinese officials confirmed their 12 million metric ton purchase quota was complete. Global central banks continue to adjust their physical metal strategies in response to the price volatility. The Central Bank of the Russian Federation adjusted its official discount prices for precious metals today, pricing gold at 10,994.70 rubles per gram. In Africa, the central bank of Sudan revised its gold export rules, introducing a daily pricing mechanism that applies a $10 per ounce discount to the global 24-karat gold rate to boost foreign currency inflows.
Key Levels and Scheduled Catalysts for the New York Session
As you position your portfolio for the North American session, watch these key technical levels across the major pairs:
- DXY: Immediate overhead resistance sits at 98.80, with support forming at the 98.48 breakout level.
- EUR/USD: Watch the 1.1650 psychological level, as a sustained break below this zone exposes the 1.1620 swing lows.
- USD/JPY: The 158.50 extension level serves as the next upside target above the current 158.32 spot price.
The economic calendar shifts to US manufacturing data today, with analysts forecasting the NY Empire State Manufacturing Index to print at 7.30, down from the previous 11.00 reading. US Industrial Production data will follow, carrying a consensus estimate of a 0.3% month-over-month expansion. These releases coincide with the official transfer of Federal Reserve leadership, as Kevin Warsh assumes the Chairman role from Jerome Powell today, the 15th of the month, 2026. You must monitor early statements from the new Chairman, as any deviation from the current balance sheet strategy, which Governor Michael S. Barr recently defended at $6.5 trillion, will trigger immediate repricing across dollar pairs. Options market tracking also revealed heavy institutional positioning expiring today, including a block of McDonald's put contracts executed at a $280.00 strike price, signaling that equity traders are hedging their exposure ahead of the weekend close.

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