
US Dollar Index Surges to 99.16 as 3.8% CPI Print Crushes Fed Rate Cut Bets
Hotter-than-expected US inflation and soaring oil prices drive a massive dollar rally, pushing EUR/USD down to 1.1703.
The US Dollar Index reclaimed the 99.16 level after April headline CPI hit 3.8%, effectively erasing market expectations for a July Federal Reserve rate cut. The resulting yield surge triggered a violent selloff in precious metals and sent the Euro tumbling to a five-day low.
EUR/USD collapsed to 1.1703 during the New York session on Friday after April headline US CPI printed at 3.8% year-over-year, decisively beating estimates and driving the US Dollar Index ($DXY) up to 99.16.
The Euro broke below its monthly opening range on the release, marking a fifth consecutive daily decline. Traders aggressively repriced Federal Reserve interest rate expectations after the cpi" title="Understanding inflation and CPI in forex">inflation data combined with last week's 115,000 Non-Farm Payrolls addition, effectively stripping a July rate cut from federal funds futures.
The underlying driver of the inflation shock stems directly from the energy markets, where West Texas Intermediate crude surged 4% to settle at $105.42 a barrel. According to statements from the White House, a highly anticipated meeting in Beijing between US President Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping concluded without any agreement to secure energy flows through the Strait of Hormuz.
The global benchmark Brent crude followed the US benchmark higher, rising 3.13% to $109.03 per barrel. Physical market flows remain severely constrained, with daily transit through the Strait of Hormuz collapsing from 20 million barrels to approximately 3.8 million barrels. The resulting energy shock pushed the US national average gasoline price to $4.53 per gallon, cementing the sticky inflation narrative that is currently driving forex flows.
Dollar Index Reclaims 99.16 as Treasury Yields Surge Across the Curve
Rising Treasury yields supplied the mechanical thrust for the greenback's rally. Short-end US rates spiked immediately following the Bureau of Labor Statistics data release, widening the yield differential against European and Asian bonds. The Fed's benchmark interest rate target remains at 3.50% to 3.75%, and Federal Reserve Chair pro tempore Jerome Powell leaves his successor, Kevin Warsh, with an accelerating inflation mandate.
USD/CAD touched an intraday high of 1.3767 before settling at 1.3735, marking the Canadian dollar's eighth consecutive daily decline. Data from the US Federal Reserve showed April industrial production outpaced consensus by a wide margin, rising 0.7% month-over-month against analyst estimates of 0.2%, which added further fundamental backing to the dollar bid.
The broader financial markets reacted violently to the combination of hot industrial data and soaring energy costs. Cisco reported a record $15.8 billion in revenue, driven by $5.3 billion in artificial intelligence infrastructure orders, yet the Nasdaq Composite still sank 410.08 points to 26,225.14. Ford shares plummeted 7.1% to $13.46 as traders took profits following the announcement of its Ford Energy subsidiary.
The British Pound offered the only notable resistance against the US dollar offensive. GBP/USD defended the 1.3510 rising channel floor during London trade. Buyers stepped in at this technical boundary, supported by the Office for National Statistics reporting a 1.2% year-over-year rise in UK gross domestic product for March.
Yen Sinks to 158.47 Despite Historic Bank of Japan Inflation Print
In Asian trade, the Japanese yen weakened to 158.47 against the dollar, failing to capitalize on the hottest domestic wholesale inflation reading in 12 years. The Bank of Japan reported a 2.3% surge in corporate goods prices for April, pushing the 20-year Japanese government bond yield to 3.59%, the highest level recorded since 1997.
The yen's inability to rally on hawkish domestic data highlights the overwhelming gravity of US rate expectations. Markets price in an imminent Bank of Japan rate hike from the current 0.75% policy rate, yet the widening gap between US and Japanese yields continues to facilitate capital outflows.
GBP/JPY confirmed a bearish corrective trend amid the broader cross-yen volatility. The pair broke below the 50% Fibonacci retracement level of 213.50, shifting momentum toward an initial downside target of 211.80.
Gold and Silver Suffer Violent Liquidations on Higher-For-Longer Repricing
Precious metals absorbed the heaviest speculative damage from the inflation print. Spot gold (XAU/USD) dropped 1.91% to $4,562.41 per ounce, testing critical support bands between $4,500 and $4,553. The surging dollar and rising real yields forced institutional longs to unwind positions established earlier this month.
Silver (XAG/USD) experienced a massive 5% liquidation event, plunging to $78.77 per ounce from a recent high above $87.00. The industrial metals complex mirrored this weakness, with copper futures falling 4.81% to $6.25 per pound. Traders aggressively sold the metals complex as the 3.8% headline CPI figure reinforced the likelihood of restricted global liquidity through the third quarter of 2026.
The equity markets reflected the tightening monetary conditions. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 537.29 points to close at 49,526.17, while Nvidia shares fell 4.4% to $225.39. The European Central Bank concurrently published a report detailing a massive portfolio shift, noting that non-bank financial institutions in the euro area expanded their securities holdings to €17 trillion by the end of 2025, heavily weighting US assets over European equities.
European markets face additional structural headwinds beyond the shifting capital flows. The European Central Bank announced a classification update to its Harmonised Index of Consumer Prices, rebasing the reference year to 2025 and officially integrating Bulgaria into the euro area aggregate following its January 1, 2026 entry. Concurrently, geopolitical financial tensions escalated after a Moscow arbitration court ordered the Brussels-based clearing house Euroclear to pay 18.2 trillion rubles, equivalent to $249.7 billion, in damages to the Central Bank of Russia over frozen assets.
Actionable Levels and Upcoming Catalysts for Forex Traders
You must monitor the 1.1600 psychological handle on EUR/USD as the next major downside objective. Order book data indicates heavy resting bids at this level, and a daily close below 1.1600 opens the door for a retest of the 2025 lows.
For the Dollar Index, the 99.16 breakout level now serves as immediate support. If $DXY holds this floor during the upcoming Asian session, the technical structure favors a continuation toward the 100.50 resistance zone.
You should position for elevated volatility surrounding the upcoming UK PMI and retail sales data releases. GBP/USD traders need to watch the 1.3510 channel floor closely, as a sustained break below this line invalidates the higher-low structure and exposes the 1.3420 liquidity pool.

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