
Dollar Index Hits 98.00 as Brent Crude Surges Past $104.00 Ahead of US CPI
The US dollar caught a massive safe-haven bid during early Monday trading after collapsed Middle East peace talks sent oil prices soaring 3.14%.
Brent crude spiked to $104.47 per barrel following the breakdown of US-Iran diplomatic negotiations, triggering a broad rally in the US Dollar Index to 98.00. The energy shock forces currency traders to reprice inflation risks ahead of Tuesday's critical US CPI report.
Global benchmark Brent crude surged $3.18 to $104.47 per barrel during early Monday trading after President Donald Trump rejected an Iranian peace proposal as totally unacceptable, forcing the US Dollar Index ($DXY) up to the 98.00 level.
The 3.14% jump in the global oil benchmark erased Friday's late pullback and triggered an immediate bid in the greenback across the G10 board. West Texas Intermediate crude mirrored the move, climbing $3.09 to $98.51 per barrel as supply disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz remained unresolved. Energy traders aggressively bid up front-month contracts following the breakdown in diplomatic talks, injecting fresh volatility into currency markets only 24 hours before the critical US Consumer Price Index release.
Saudi Aramco reported a $32.5 billion first-quarter profit on Monday, representing a 25% year-over-year jump. The state-owned energy giant protected its margins by rerouting oil exports through alternative pipelines to bypass the blockaded Strait of Hormuz. The sheer scale of the disruption forced markets to reprice global energy availability, directly feeding into the dollar's strength as a safe-haven asset.
Dollar Index Rebounds to 98.00 Ahead of 3.7% CPI Target
The dollar index recovered a portion of last week's 3% decline from late March highs to touch 98.00 as rising energy costs altered the near-term inflation outlook. Markets price in a 0.6% month-over-month headline inflation print for Tuesday morning, which would push the annualized US inflation rate to 3.7%. Analysts at Bank of America Global Research adjusted their interest rate models based on this energy-driven inflation persistence, forecasting that the Federal Reserve will hold the federal funds rate at the current 3.50% to 3.75% target range until the second half of 2027.
Futures positioning data from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission showed aggregate dollar exposure falling by $4.7 billion to $6.2 billion last week before the weekend oil spike forced a rapid reassessment. EUR/USD fell to 1.1786 in the European session as large speculators and asset managers liquidated 9,000 net-long contracts. EUR/USD analysis indicates traders are clearing exposure ahead of the US data print. European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde noted over the weekend that the governing council requires more data before tightening policy beyond the current 2.15% main refinancing rate, citing massive uncertainty from the Middle East conflict.
The British Pound faced similar downward pressure, with GBP/USD trading near 1.3634. Futures positioning revealed a bearish shift among institutional traders, with net shorts on the pound rising by 12,000 contracts across major trading groups as long positions were trimmed. The broader central bank environment saw the European Central Bank and the Reserve Bank of India officially sign a new Memorandum of Understanding on Monday to strengthen bilateral regulatory frameworks, though immediate market focus remained on the widening yield differentials favoring the US dollar.
Yen Shorts Plunge by 56,300 Contracts Following 10 Trillion Yen Intervention
The Bank of Japan's suspected market operations triggered a massive structural shift in currency futures, with USD/JPY stabilizing near 156.67 in Tokyo trade. The latest Commitments of Traders report revealed that hedge funds and institutional players slashed their net-short yen exposure by 56,300 contracts over the previous five sessions. Data from Japan's Ministry of Finance indicated the central bank deployed nearly 10 trillion yen, or $63.7 billion, to arrest the currency's slide against the dollar. USD/JPY analysis points to a severe reduction in carry trade positioning following the intervention.
Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda's recent hawkish shift prompted swap markets to price in a potential rate hike from 0.75% to 1.00% at the upcoming June 15 meeting. The combination of direct Ministry of Finance intervention and the threat of tighter monetary policy created a floor for the yen, even as the broader dollar complex caught a safe-haven bid from the collapsing Middle East peace talks.
Commodity Currencies Gain Traction as Brent Breaks $104.00
The Australian Dollar and Norwegian Krone decoupled from the broader anti-dollar trend to lead the G10 complex on Monday. The Krone appreciated 1% against the euro and dollar following an unexpected rate hike from the Norges Bank, drawing additional buying pressure from the multi-day rebound in energy markets. USD/CAD climbed back above the 1.3700 threshold as traders digested divergent North American labor data alongside the geopolitical premium in oil markets.
Last Friday's Non-Farm Payrolls report provided the baseline fundamental support for the North American session moves. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported 115,000 jobs added in April, easily surpassing the 62,000 consensus estimate. The US unemployment rate held at 4.3%, while average hourly earnings rose a subdued 0.2% month-over-month. The robust employment data, combined with soaring crude prices, reinforced the narrative that the US economy tolerates current borrowing costs, leaving the Federal Reserve with zero immediate pressure to ease policy. Non-farm payrolls data continues to anchor the higher-for-longer rate narrative.
White House economists projected over the weekend that a 3.3% March jump in capital investment will push future US gross domestic product growth to 5.0% or 6.0% once new domestic factories come online. The most recent first-quarter GDP advance estimate showed the US economy growing at an annualized rate of 2.0%, rebounding from 0.5% growth in the fourth quarter of 2025. This robust growth outlook gives the Federal Reserve ample runway to maintain restrictive rates.
Gold Dips to $4,697 as Equities Price In Delayed Rate Cuts
International spot XAU/USD slipped 0.4% to $4,697.85 per ounce during the Asian session, pressured by the surging dollar and rising bond yields. The inverse correlation between energy-driven inflation fears and non-yielding assets dominated early trade. In regional markets, 24-carat gold traded between 1,52,610 rupees in Delhi and 1,53,320 rupees in Chennai per 10 grams. Prices in India held firm despite an appeal from Prime Minister Narendra Modi urging citizens to temporarily postpone gold purchases to preserve the country's foreign exchange reserves amid the Middle East conflict.
Bitcoin caught a strong bid over the weekend, crossing the $82,000 threshold late Sunday to reach its highest trading level since January. The cryptocurrency absorbed capital outflows from traditional equities as S&P 500 futures fell 0.3% and Dow Jones futures dropped 130 points. The equity benchmarks retreated from last week's record high of 7,398.93 as traders priced out 2026 monetary easing. Individual equity movers reflected the shifting macro environment. Intel rallied 25% over the past week on reports of a preliminary chip-manufacturing agreement with Apple, while Datadog soared 31% to close at $188.73 after raising its full-year revenue outlook to $4.34 billion. Conversely, animal health giant Zoetis plummeted 22% to $87.31 after cutting its full-year earnings forecast to $7 per share, citing inflation curbing consumer pet spending.
Inflation swap markets currently price in the risk of headline US CPI pushing toward 4.0% in the coming months if Brent crude maintains its position above the $100.00 handle. The energy shock directly impacted trade flows, with China's Customs Administration reporting a 20% year-over-year drop in crude oil imports to 9.4 million barrels per day in April, alongside a 13% decline in natural gas imports.
Actionable Levels and Tuesday CPI Catalysts
You need to watch the 98.40 resistance level on the dollar index heading into Tuesday's New York open. A headline CPI print exceeding the 3.7% annualized consensus will likely force a breakout above this technical ceiling, exposing the 99.10 zone. If core inflation pushes past the 0.4% monthly estimate, expect immediate downward pressure on EUR/USD toward the 1.1710 support block.
For USD/JPY, the 157.20 level serves as your primary upside barrier. Any test of this zone risks triggering additional rhetoric or direct action from the Ministry of Finance, especially given the rapid 56,300-contract reduction in speculative short positioning. On the downside, a break below 155.80 opens the door for a retest of the intervention lows. Support and resistance levels in this pair remain highly sensitive to yield spreads.
Your commodity exposure requires strict risk limits as Brent crude tests the $105.00 psychological barrier. If the US-Iran diplomatic channel remains closed, WTI crude will likely challenge the $100.00 mark, dragging USD/CAD back down toward 1.3620 as Canadian export terms of trade improve.

FN Pulse Editorial Team
Expert Trading Analysts
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