
Forex Markets Face Most Critical Week of 2026 as CPI, Retail Sales, and Trump-Xi Summit Converge
Dollar Index at 97.90 tests triple-bottom support while Tuesday's CPI and Thursday's Trump-Xi talks could reshape Q2 positioning

The week of May 12 brings the most consequential convergence of market catalysts in 2026: US CPI Tuesday, retail sales Thursday, and President Trump's Beijing summit with Xi Jinping. With the Dollar Index testing critical 97.61 triple-bottom support and EUR/USD hovering near 1.1780 resistance, traders face binary outcomes that could define second-quarter positioning across all major currency pairs.
Forex markets enter the most consequential week of 2026 as three major catalysts converge: Tuesday's CPI release, Thursday's US retail sales data, and President Trump's Beijing summit with Xi Jinping on May 14-15. With the US Dollar Index ($DXY) testing critical triple-bottom support at 97.61 and EUR/USD consolidating near 1.1780, the week ahead could deliver binary outcomes that reshape Q2 positioning across all major currency pairs.
Dollar Index Tests Critical Support After NFP Wage Miss
The Dollar Index closed Friday at 97.90, down 0.23% despite a massive 115,000 NFP beat, as traders dumped the greenback following softer-than-expected wage growth of just 0.2% month-over-month. The move broke the psychological 98.00 level and brought $DXY within striking distance of the 97.61 triple-bottom support—a level that has held three times since mid-April.
Technical analysts note that EUR/USD is now testing the upper boundary of its recent 1.1670-1.1795 range, with resistance clustered at 1.1780-1.1795. Bollinger Bands are narrowing after previous expansion, signaling lower volatility and accumulation ahead of the next directional move. A decisive break above 1.1795 could trigger stops and open the path toward the 1.1870-1.20 resistance cluster that has capped euro strength since early 2026.
Tuesday's CPI: The Week's First Inflection Point
The April Consumer Price Index drops Tuesday at 8:30 AM ET, three days after a mixed NFP report left Fed rate cut odds in limbo. Consensus expects headline CPI to rise 0.6% month-over-month (cooling from March's 0.9% surge), while core CPI is forecast at 0.4% M/M, up from 0.2% previously.
The Cleveland Fed's inflation nowcast is tracking April CPI at 0.45% M/M versus 0.42% in March, with the core rate holding steady at 0.21%. Annual rates are tracking at 3.56% year-over-year for headline and 2.56% for core—still well above the Federal Reserve's 2% target.
The data takes on heightened importance after March's hot CPI report showed consumer prices rising to their highest level since May 2024 at 3.3% Y/Y, driven by a 10.9% M/M jump in energy prices and a 21.2% spike in gasoline. Markets are now hyper-focused on whether the war-driven energy shock is feeding into broader inflation and consumer demand.
Fed's Hawkish Tilt Raises the Stakes
At the April FOMC meeting, three dissenters—Hammack, Kashkari, and Logan—voted against including any easing bias in the statement, arguing that inflation risks had risen enough for the Fed to keep all options open, including holding rates for longer or even hiking rather than signaling an easing bias. Some analysts suggested this might be a message to incoming Chair Kevin Warsh, who has previously endorsed lower rates alongside tighter balance sheet policy.
Another key shift came in the April statement's inflation language: the line that inflation "remains somewhat elevated" was replaced with "elevated," and the Fed attributed this to the recent surge in global energy prices—a tweak judged by most desks to be a hawkish tilt. With markets now pricing near-zero rate cuts in 2026 and some desks even discussing 2027 as the earliest easing window, Tuesday's CPI print could determine whether the dollar extends its weakness or reclaims lost ground.
Thursday's Retail Sales: Consumer Resilience Test
The April retail sales report hits Thursday at 8:30 AM ET, offering a critical read on consumer resilience in the face of the energy shock. March retail sales surged 1.7% M/M, driven by gasoline, while core sales (excluding autos) printed at 1.9% M/M.
The Chicago Fed's CARTS advance retail trade update suggests ex-autos retail sales will rise 1.1% M/M in April (versus 0.6% prior), and 0.3% M/M when adjusted for inflation. Continuum Economics expects headline retail sales to rise 0.7% M/M, with ex-autos up 0.9% and ex-autos/gas up 0.5%.
"Higher gasoline prices pose risk to real disposable incomes, which has underperformed consumer spending in the last four quarters, though only marginally in Q1," Continuum Economics wrote. "Tax cuts and higher tax refunds are providing some support to consumers."
Trump-Xi Summit: Geopolitical Wild Card
US President Trump flies to Beijing on May 14-15 to meet Chinese President Xi Jinping in what is being billed as a make-or-break summit for US-Iran peace efforts, trade relations, and regional stability. The two leaders will cover several topics, including the Middle East conflict, trade relations, Taiwan, AI, and agriculture.
On the Middle East, both Trump and China have suggested they want the Iran war wrapped up before the meeting, which would allow the two to focus on other areas. However, Polymarket prices a permanent peace deal between the US and Iran by May 13 at just 17%. China has said it wants a resolution, noting the visit is set to go ahead but that the conflict has caused uncertainty over planning and lowered expectations.
Reports emerged last week that China is refusing to comply with some US sanctions, having apparently ordered its oil refineries that purchase crude from Tehran not to comply with or enforce US sanctions on Iranian oil. US Trade Representative Greer confirmed these issues will be discussed at the upcoming meeting. President Trump also noted he offered to let China send oil ships to the US, a potential workaround if the Strait of Hormuz remains partially blocked.
On trade, USTR Greer highlighted that China should be an important buyer of US agriculture and medical devices. Trump is reportedly inviting several CEOs on his trip, including executives from Nvidia, Apple, Exxon, Boeing, Qualcomm, Blackstone, Citigroup, and Visa—signaling the economic dimension will be front and center.
What Traders Are Watching: Key Levels and Scenarios
Bullish Dollar Scenario (CPI hot, summit disappoints):
- CPI comes in at or above 0.6% M/M headline / 0.4% core
- Trump-Xi summit produces no meaningful breakthrough on Iran or trade
- $DXY reclaims 98.00 and targets 98.50-99.00
- EUR/USD breaks below 1.1670 support, opening path to 1.1550-1.1600
- Gold (XAU/USD) pulls back from $4,715 toward $4,650-4,680
Bearish Dollar Scenario (CPI soft, summit delivers):
- CPI undershoots expectations at 0.4-0.5% headline / 0.2-0.3% core
- Trump-Xi summit announces Iran ceasefire framework or trade deal progress
- $DXY breaks 97.61 triple-bottom support, accelerating to 96.50-97.00
- EUR/USD clears 1.1795 resistance, targeting 1.1870-1.1950
- Gold extends rally toward $4,800-4,850
Mixed/Rangebound Scenario (in-line data, summit neutral):
- CPI prints in line with consensus, retail sales meets forecasts
- Trump-Xi summit yields vague commitments but no concrete deals
- $DXY consolidates 97.61-98.50 range for another week
- EUR/USD remains trapped in 1.1670-1.1795 range
- Implied volatility stays elevated ahead of next catalyst
Other Key Data Points This Week
Monday: Chinese CPI (April), expected to ease to 0.8-1.0% Y/Y from 1.0%, while PPI is forecast to strengthen to 1.5-1.9% Y/Y on rising energy and commodity costs.
Tuesday: Bank of Japan Summary of Opinions (April meeting), key to confirming the hawkish shift after the 6-3 rate hike vote.
Wednesday: US PPI (April), expected to rise 0.4% M/M, cooling from 0.5% prior; Bank of Canada meeting minutes from April decision.
Friday: US Industrial Production (April), expected to reflect elevated manufacturing costs from higher energy prices.
Bottom Line: Binary Week for Dollar and Risk Assets
The convergence of high-stakes data and geopolitical developments makes this the most critical week for forex markets since the Iran conflict escalated in April. With interest rate expectations in flux, central bank policy paths uncertain, and geopolitical risks still elevated, traders should prepare for sharp directional moves and elevated volatility across all major pairs.
Position sizing discipline and tight stop-loss orders will be critical as Tuesday's CPI and Thursday's Trump-Xi headlines hit the wires. The market is priced for drama—and this week is likely to deliver it.

Jesus Guzman
Founder & Lead Analyst
Jesus is the founder of FN Pulse and a veteran trader with over 15 years of experience in financial markets. He specializes in quantitative analysis and is passionate about bringing transparency and data-driven insights to the retail trading industry.