
US Dollar Index Surges to 99.28 on 3.8% CPI as June Rate Cut Odds Collapse
Hotter-than-expected US inflation data and geopolitical energy shocks drove a massive repricing in currency markets heading into the Asian open.
The US Dollar Index reclaimed the 99.00 level after April CPI printed at 3.8%, erasing expectations for near-term Fed rate cuts. The hawkish repricing sent USD/JPY toward intervention territory and triggered a $110 plunge in spot gold.
US Dollar Index Reclaims 99.00 on 3.8% Inflation Print
The US Dollar Index ($DXY) surged 0.47% to close at 99.28 on Friday after April US Consumer Price Index data printed at 3.8% year-over-year, completely erasing market expectations for a June Federal Reserve rate cut. The hotter-than-expected headline cpi" title="Understanding inflation and CPI in forex">inflation reading, driven by a 17.9% annual spike in overall energy costs, pushed 30-year US Treasury yields above 5.1% and triggered a massive repricing across the foreign exchange market heading into Sunday's Asian session open. The month-over-month CPI increase of 0.6% outpaced consensus estimates, while core CPI, which excludes food and energy, rose 2.8% over the last twelve months.
Forward swaps now price in less than an 8% probability of a rate reduction at the upcoming Federal Open Market Committee meeting, a steep collapse from the 48% chance priced in earlier this week. The inflation data arrived alongside a massive beat in the latest Non-Farm Payrolls report. The US economy added 115,000 jobs in April, crushing Wall Street forecasts of 62,000 to 65,000 new positions. March job gains were also revised upward to 185,000, keeping the national unemployment rate pinned at 4.3%. The Senate's 54-45 confirmation vote for Kevin Warsh as the new Fed Chairman mid-month adds an untested policy variable to the mix. Analysts project the central bank will hold rates steady through the remainder of 2026, with traders now assigning a 20% probability to a 25 basis point hike in December to combat sticky price pressures.
EUR/USD Breaks Support as GBP/USD Hits 1.3325
EUR/USD dropped 0.38% to settle at 1.1625, slicing through short-term moving averages as the yield differential between US Treasuries and European bonds widened. The pair sits perilously close to the 1.1578 floor, a level that technical analysts flag as the final barrier before a deeper structural downtrend takes hold. European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde is scheduled to address global inflation pressures at the G7 Central Bank Governors meeting in Paris on Monday, following the ECB decision to hold its benchmark rate at 2.00% for the seventh consecutive session. Analysts project a June rate hike from the ECB is highly likely as energy and food inflation continue to squeeze the Eurozone economy.
GBP/USD suffered an even steeper decline, plunging 0.57% to a monthly low of 1.3325 during the New York session. A sudden political crisis in the UK overshadowed Friday's positive 0.6% first-quarter GDP growth print. The resignation of Health Secretary Wes Streeting and mounting calls for Prime Minister Keir Starmer to step down forced institutional sellers to dump the British Pound, accelerating the pair's descent alongside broad dollar strength.
Bank of Japan Tapering Propels USD/JPY Toward 160.00
USD/JPY climbed 0.25% to reach 158.77, pushing the exchange rate back into the dangerous territory where the Japanese Ministry of Finance previously authorized currency intervention. The Japanese Yen continues to weaken despite aggressive balance sheet reduction from the Bank of Japan. Data released this weekend shows the BOJ slashed its monthly Japanese Government Bond purchases by nearly 50%, reducing the volume from 5.7 trillion Yen to 2.9 trillion Yen.
The Bank of Japan's tapering sent Japan's benchmark 10-year government bond yield surging to 2.73%, marking the highest yield recorded since spring 1997. The 30-year Japanese yield also crossed the 4% threshold for the first time in decades. The domestic yield spike prompted Japanese investors to repatriate funds, dumping a record $29.6 billion in US Treasuries during the first quarter of 2026. Forward swaps now indicate a 77% probability that the BOJ will execute a 25 basis point rate hike in June to bring its policy rate to 1.00%, a move designed to prevent underlying inflation from breaching the central bank's 2% mandate.
Gold Plunges $110 as Energy Markets Price in Supply Shocks
XAU/USD faced relentless selling pressure, dropping 2.37% to settle at $4,551.49 per ounce in New York before slipping further to $4,538 in early Sunday electronic trading. The $110.25 intraday loss materialized as surging real yields made non-yielding bullion less attractive to institutional asset managers. Silver recorded an even more severe crash, plunging 8.74% to $76.70 per ounce after UBS analysts downgraded their near-term silver demand forecast from 400 million to 300 million ounces. Platinum declined 3.69% to $1,996.70 per ounce, while palladium slid 2.35% to close at $1,434.28.
Energy commodities surged on geopolitical supply fears, with Brent crude advancing 3.31% to $109.22 per barrel and West Texas Intermediate climbing 4.44% to $105.66. The failure of conditional ceasefire talks between the US and Iran has kept the Strait of Hormuz closed to standard shipping traffic. Energy analysts estimate this ongoing blockade has temporarily removed up to 16% of global crude supply from the market, fueling the 28.4% annualized spike in US gasoline prices recorded in the April CPI report. The Canadian Dollar capitalized on this oil rally, strengthening significantly on cross pairs like AUD/CAD.
Equities and Crypto Slide on 4.49% Treasury Yield
Equity markets reflected the aggressive repricing of US interest rates, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropping 537 points to close the week. The S&P 500 fell 1.24% after April's Producer Price Index surged 1.4%, well above the 0.5% forecast, which pushed the 10-year Treasury yield to a 10-month high of 4.49%. The Q1 2026 Advance GDP estimate showed the US economy expanding at a 2.0% annualized rate, propped up by an estimated $800 billion in corporate artificial intelligence investment. Business investment in equipment surged 10.4%, masking a severe slowdown in consumer spending, which grew at a sluggish 1.6%.
Enterprise software stocks took heavy losses from rising Treasury yields, with Guidewire Software falling 4.6% and GitLab sliding 3.5%. The cryptocurrency market faced widespread weekend declines, with Bitcoin slipping 1.30% over the last 24 hours to trade around $78,363. XRP is currently testing a critical support level at $1.41 after failing to hold recovery attempts above the $1.45 zone.
Key Levels and Catalysts for Your Trading Week
As you prepare your positions for the upcoming week, the 99.00 level on the US Dollar Index will serve as your primary pivot point. A sustained break above 99.50 opens the door for another wave of broad dollar buying, particularly against the Euro. For EUR/USD, you must watch the 1.1578 support level closely. A daily close below this line invalidates the current consolidation zone and clears the path for a test of 1.1500.
If you are trading Yen pairs, 160.00 remains the absolute ceiling for USD/JPY before the Ministry of Finance deploys foreign exchange reserves. Keep your economic calendar open for Tuesday's Reserve Bank of Australia meeting minutes, which will provide insight into how other central banks are digesting the global energy shock. Finally, the People's Bank of China interest rate decision on Wednesday will dictate the next directional move for copper and commodity-linked currencies, especially after copper erased its weekly gains with a 3% drop on Friday.

FN Pulse Editorial Team
Expert Trading Analysts
Our editorial team consists of experienced forex traders, financial analysts, and market researchers dedicated to providing accurate and actionable trading education.