
Dollar Index Hits 10-Week Low at 97.91 Despite 115K NFP Beat
Risk appetite surges and safe-haven dollar demand collapses after a US court strikes down 10% global tariffs.
The US Dollar Index fell to 97.91 as improving global risk sentiment overshadowed a massive Nonfarm Payrolls beat. Euro bulls capitalized on the weakness to push EUR/USD past 1.1770 ahead of critical inflation data.
US Nonfarm Payrolls added 115,000 jobs in April to nearly double the 60,000 consensus estimate, sending the US Dollar Index (DXY) down 0.16% to a 10-week low of 97.91 during the Friday New York session. Data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics showed the unemployment rate holding steady at 4.3%, while average hourly earnings rose 0.2% month-over-month. Despite the robust labor print and an upward revision of March payrolls to 185,000, the greenback failed to catch a bid as a US Court of International Trade ruling struck down the recently implemented 10% global tariffs. The 2-1 court decision removed a massive protectionist premium from the currency, allowing risk assets to rally and draining safe-haven flows out of the dollar.
Euro Surges to 1.1774 as Tariff Ruling Drains Dollar Premium
EUR/USD climbed 0.41% to trade at 1.1774 following the tariff news, breaking above the critical $1.1750 resistance level to reach its highest point since April 20. Analysts at Nomura project that Eurozone cpi" title="Understanding inflation and CPI in forex">inflation, which hit 3.0% in April due to Middle East oil shocks, keeps the European Central Bank on track to raise its 2.15% main refinancing rate at the June meeting. The combination of hawkish ECB pricing and the removal of the US import surcharge triggered heavy dollar selling against the single currency across the European and US trading sessions.
Brent crude oil for July delivery added 1.2% to reach $101.29 per barrel, reinforcing the energy-driven inflation narrative in Europe. The persistent energy costs force European bond yields higher, narrowing the transatlantic yield spread and providing structural support for the euro above the 1.1700 handle. Agricultural commodities are also spiking due to these energy costs, with the United Nations food-commodity index climbing 1.6% month-over-month. The vegetable oils index spiked 5.9% and the meat index climbed 1.2% to a record high, ensuring that headline inflation pressures will dominate central bank policy throughout the summer.
Bank of America Pushes Fed Rate Cuts to Late 2027
Bank of America officially revised its rate expectations on Friday, projecting the Federal Reserve will delay interest rate reductions until the second half of 2027. The bank cited US inflation remaining stubbornly fixed at 3.3%, sitting well above the central bank target of 2.0%. CME Group FedWatch pricing now reflects a less than 50% probability of any rate reductions before late 2027, completely pricing out the easing cycle previously anticipated for this year.
Underlying metrics within the employment report showed signs of labor market cooling that complicate the headline jobs beat. The number of Americans working part-time for economic reasons surged by 445,000 to reach 4.9 million, and the labor-force participation rate dipped to 61.8%. Job gains were heavily concentrated in specific sectors, led by healthcare adding 37,000 positions, transportation and warehousing adding 30,000, and retail growing by 22,000. These internal crosscurrents leave the Fed trapped between sticky consumer prices and a structurally weakening workforce.
Markets are digesting the labor data against recent growth figures, which showed real gross domestic product growing at a 2.0% annualized rate in the first quarter of 2026. The Atlanta Fed GDPNow model currently estimates a robust 3.7% growth rate for the second quarter. The resilient growth metrics fueled a massive stock market rally, with the Nasdaq Composite surging 1.71% to close at a record 26,247.08. The broader risk-on environment further suppressed the dollar, as capital rotated out of safe-haven cash and into equities.
Yen Trapped at 156.93 by Bank of Japan Intervention Wall
USD/JPY spent the Friday session pinned near 156.93, caught between the broader dollar sell-off and explicit intervention threats from the Bank of Japan. Upside momentum faces a massive defensive wall from the Ministry of Finance capping the pair below the 158.00 level. Downside price action remains equally restricted by a dense cluster of institutional bids parked around 155.65.
Japan reported a 1.0% year-over-year rise in inflation-adjusted real wages for March, marking the third consecutive monthly gain for Japanese workers. Total cash earnings increased by 2.7% during the same period. Following the wage data release, a Reuters survey showed nearly two-thirds of economists now project the BOJ will raise its policy interest rate to 1.0% at the upcoming June 15-16 meeting. The prospect of narrowing interest rate differentials keeps speculative short-sellers sidelined, draining volatility from the yen crosses.
Gold Holds $4,715 Amid Strait of Hormuz Tensions
Spot XAU/USD added $11.09 to trade at $4,715.24 per ounce, hovering slightly below record highs as geopolitical risk premiums offset the hawkish Fed repricing. Safe-haven demand remains elevated as commercial shipping faces ongoing disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz. Silver outpaced the yellow metal, jumping 2.1% to hit $80.09 per ounce in the New York afternoon. Platinum also caught a bid, rising 0.6% to $2,034.80 per ounce.
The Malaysian Ringgit surged to 3.91 against the US dollar, recovering sharply from 3.97 earlier in the week. Emerging market currencies caught a broad tailwind from the US court tariff ruling and reports of a potential ceasefire framework between the US and Iran. Bank Indonesia Governor Perry Warjiyo confirmed his central bank is going "all out" to defend the rupiah following $1.7 billion in foreign portfolio outflows during the first quarter. The US Treasury is actively debating requests to extend permanent dollar swap lines to allies like the UAE to prevent global liquidity shortages amid the ongoing Middle East conflict.
Actionable Levels and Upcoming CPI Catalyst
You must now position for the April Consumer Price Index release scheduled for the upcoming Tuesday session. Consensus forecasts call for a 0.5% month-over-month increase, which would push the annualized inflation rate to 3.4%. If the print exceeds 3.7%, expect an immediate reversal of Friday's dollar weakness as bond markets fully price out the 2027 rate cuts.
Watch the 1.1750 level on the euro, which now flips from resistance to structural support. A sustained break below 1.1700 invalidates the current bullish breakout and exposes the 1.1620 liquidity pool. For yen traders, the 158.00 upside boundary remains a strict no-trade zone due to the high probability of unannounced BOJ intervention, making the 155.65 support level your primary target for mean-reversion entries. Keep a close eye on Brent crude oil prices at the $101.00 level, as any sudden spikes related to Strait of Hormuz supply disruptions will immediately filter into higher European inflation expectations and subsequent euro strength.

FN Pulse Editorial Team
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