
Dollar Index Hits 98.48 as Fractured Fed Holds Rates at 3.75%
The greenback secures a 0.6% weekly gain while the Euro sinks on stagflation warnings.
The US Dollar Index surged to 98.48 following an 8-4 divided Federal Reserve rate hold and rising 10-year Treasury yields. Widening policy divergence pushed EUR/USD down to 1.1717 as the ECB warned of stagflation risks.
The US Dollar Index ($DXY) climbed to 98.48 during Thursday's London session, securing a 0.6% weekly gain driven by a surge in 10-year Treasury yields to 4.46% and a fractured Federal Reserve decision to hold rates at 3.50% to 3.75%. United States April Consumer Price Index data printed at 3.8% year-over-year earlier this week, forcing interest rate markets to price in a steady federal funds target range through the end of 2026. The greenback's sustained bid reflects a widening policy divergence across the G10 complex, punishing European assets while pushing the Japanese Yen past critical intervention thresholds. The Federal Open Market Committee delivered its first four-person dissent since October 1992, with Governor Miran voting for a 25 basis point cut while three other members objected to the statement's forward-looking language. This internal division highlights the complex macro environment facing the central bank following a 76% spike in oil prices between late February and early April.
Euro Sinks to 1.1717 on ECB Stagflation Warnings
EUR/USD traded flat around 1.1717 on Thursday morning but remains on track for a 0.6% weekly loss, marking the single currency's largest decline in two months. European Central Bank Governing Council member Olli Rehn warned today that the Eurozone is showing early signs of stagflation, citing a Middle East energy shock that pushed April regional inflation to 3.0%. This overshoot of the central bank's 2.0% target complicates the central bank policy analysis for Frankfurt officials.
France reported an unexpected jump in its unemployment rate to an 8.1% five-year high on Wednesday, providing concrete evidence of softening economic expansion. Traders sold the euro aggressively as the divergence between a stalling European economy and a resilient US labor market became apparent in the price action. The April Non-Farm Payrolls report added 115,000 jobs, beating the 55,000 consensus forecast, which keeps the Federal Reserve firmly anchored in its current restrictive stance.
Despite the headline jobs beat in the US, the household survey revealed 803,000 workers moving into fresh labor distress in a single month. Data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics showed 358,000 newly unemployed individuals and 445,000 shifting to part-time work for economic reasons. Institutional desks are largely ignoring this underlying weakness, focusing instead on the 3.0% US Core PCE inflation reading that prevents any immediate dollar selling.
Yen Reverses Early Gains Near 157.87 as BOJ Signals Hike
USD/JPY reversed early Tokyo session gains to trade slightly lower at 157.87, though the pair remains dangerously close to the 160.00 threshold that previously triggered suspected interventions by Japan's Finance Ministry. Former Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda stated today that the yen's current valuation near 160 is too weak for the domestic economy, identifying a balanced rate between 120 and 130 yen per dollar.
Rising energy costs are amplifying the pressure on Japanese policymakers to defend the currency. BOJ policy board member Kazuyuki Masu signaled that a near-term rate hike is imminent due to energy-driven inflation risks. Interest rate futures currently imply a 77% probability of a rate increase from 0.75% to 1.0% at the scheduled June 16 meeting.
The Asian currency complex is experiencing massive volatility beyond the yen. The offshore Chinese Yuan (CNY) strengthened for an eighth consecutive day against the dollar, reaching 6.7845 as currency markets closely monitored the high-stakes summit between US President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing. Conversely, the Indian Rupee (INR) dropped 0.15% to a fresh record low of 95.86 against the greenback, heavily pressured by persistent foreign institutional investor outflows and rising safe-haven demand.
Pound Rallies 2.1% on Surprise UK GDP Print
GBP/USD held steady above the 1.3500 support level, outperforming its European peers with a 2.1% advance for the week. The British Pound caught a massive bid after the Office for National Statistics reported UK gross domestic product expanded by 0.3% in March and 0.6% quarter-over-quarter.
This unexpected growth offset ongoing political pressures surrounding Prime Minister Keir Starmer and triggered a wave of short-covering across London dealing desks. Traders are actively buying sterling dips, recognizing that the robust domestic growth metrics give the Bank of England ample room to delay any easing cycle. The UK GDP data release directly countered the weakness seen in the Eurozone, driving the EUR/GBP cross down 0.4% during the morning trade.
Broader equity markets are reflecting the complex macro backdrop. Cerebras Systems priced its Initial Public Offering of 30 million shares at $185.00 per share today, significantly above the projected range. Ford Motor Company shares jumped 13% to $13.57 after Barclays analysts highlighted energy storage as a new catalyst, while Wolfspeed surged 21% in premarket trading on artificial intelligence infrastructure demand.
Oil Premium Holds and Gold Consolidates Near $4,700
Brent crude oil futures gained 13 cents to reach $105.76 per barrel during European hours, recovering from a volatile Wednesday session where prices plunged $2.14 to settle at $105.63. US West Texas Intermediate crude ticked up by 12 cents to trade at $101.14 a barrel. Markets currently price in a geopolitical premium of $8 to $12 per barrel due to the ongoing US-Iran conflict and potential supply disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz.
Gold (XAU/USD) edged 0.3% higher to trade between $4,692 and $4,702 per ounce, bouncing back from a dip below $4,640 earlier in the week. The precious metal caught safe-haven flows as traders await outcomes from the high-stakes summit in Beijing. US gold futures for June delivery held steady at $4,706.90 per ounce.
In regional markets, Indian MCX gold surged 0.5% to Rs 1,62,911 per 10 grams, continuing momentum from Wednesday's Rs 11,000 jump triggered by the Indian government hiking the gold import duty from 6% to 15%. Silver faced downward pressure in today's session, falling 0.4% to trade at $87.64 per ounce, while platinum gained 0.7% to reach $2,151.38 per ounce.
Key Levels and Scheduled Catalysts for the New York Session
You must monitor the 8:30 AM ET data block closely, as the US Census Bureau will release April Retail Sales alongside weekly Initial Jobless Claims. Consensus estimates for retail sales will test the resilience of the US consumer following the 3.8% CPI print and the recent 1.4% surge in the Producer Price Index.
If retail sales beat consensus forecasts, the dollar index will likely test resistance at 98.80, which would push EUR/USD down to test the 1.1680 support zone. A strong retail sales number will validate the Federal Reserve's decision to hold rates at 3.50% to 3.75% and force traders to price out any remaining rate cut expectations for 2026.
For your yen positioning, watch the 158.00 psychological barrier on USD/JPY. A break above this level ahead of the June 16 BOJ meeting will attract heavy verbal intervention from Tokyo officials. If you are trading the New York session, keep a tight stop on gold positions around $4,680, as any headlines emerging from the Trump-Xi summit in Beijing will trigger immediate liquidity gaps across the precious metals complex.

FN Pulse Editorial Team
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