
US Dollar Index Hits 98.50 on 6.0% April PPI Inflation Shock
The DXY crushed major currency pairs after wholesale inflation data obliterated consensus forecasts and sent the 10-year Treasury yield to 4.48%.
Hotter-than-expected US Producer Price Index data pushed the Dollar Index to 98.50 during Thursday's New York session. The resulting yield spike forced EUR/USD below 1.1700 and drove USD/JPY toward the 158.00 handle.
The US Dollar Index ($DXY) surged to 98.50 during the New York session on Thursday after the April Producer Price Index printed at 6.0% year-over-year, obliterating the 4.9% consensus forecast. The resulting cpi" title="Understanding inflation and CPI in forex">inflation shock sent the benchmark 10-year US Treasury yield climbing to 4.48%, forcing traders to rapidly unwind near-term rate cut bets. Newly confirmed Federal Reserve Chairman Kevin Warsh assumes control of the central bank against a backdrop of accelerating wholesale prices and a resilient labor market, with initial jobless claims printing at 211,000 for the week ending May 9.
Traders aggressively bought the dollar following Tuesday's Consumer Price Index release, which revealed headline inflation rose 0.6% month-over-month and 3.8% year-over-year. Core CPI increased by 0.4% in April, validating the higher-for-longer monetary policy stance. Retail sales data released today further supported the greenback, showing a 0.5% month-over-month increase that perfectly matched consensus estimates. Core control group sales also rose by 0.5%, beating the 0.4% forecast and demonstrating sustained consumer demand despite elevated borrowing costs.
EUR/USD Breaks 1.1700 as Yield Differentials Widen
Selling pressure overwhelmed EUR/USD buyers at the 1.1700 psychological support level, dragging the pair down to test its critical 200-day Simple Moving Average at 1.1680. The EUR/USD analysis models show a 0.65% weekly decline, reflecting an aggressive repricing of transatlantic monetary policy. The transmission mechanism relies entirely on the widening gap between US and European sovereign debt yields, prompting institutional capital to chase higher risk-free returns in dollar-denominated assets.
European Central Bank Chief Economist Philip Lane signaled the governing council will execute a 25 basis-point rate hike at the June meeting to combat 3.0% eurozone consumer inflation. The sheer magnitude of the US inflation beat overshadowed European tightening prospects. ECB Vice Chair Frank Elderson added to the complex European narrative by urging euro area banks to patch vulnerabilities against AI-assisted cyberattacks, noting that Japan's three largest banks will receive clearance to test their digital defenses using Anthropic's new Mythos AI model in two weeks.
Bank of Japan Hawkish Pivot Fails to Halt USD/JPY March to 158.00
The USD/JPY exchange rate pushed higher into the 157.85 to 158.00 zone during Asian trade, completely ignoring hawkish rhetoric from Bank of Japan policymakers. BOJ board member Kazuyuki Masu publicly advocated for an early rate hike, stating the central bank needs to lift rates toward a neutral range of 1.1% to 2.5% to contain inflation. The yen continues to depreciate because the absolute yield differential with 4.48% US Treasuries remains massive, making the Japanese currency a primary funding vehicle for carry trade strategies.
Markets priced in a 70% probability of a June BOJ rate hike following Masu's comments, sending the 10-year Japanese government bond yield spiking to a 29-year high of 2.605%. The April policy meeting concluded with a divided 6-3 vote to hold the policy rate at 0.75%, highlighting internal divisions within the central bank. Traders using the yen to fund purchases of higher-yielding emerging market currencies pushed the Mexican Peso higher, driving the USD/MXN pair down to test major support blocks between 17.15 and the 17.00 handle.
UK GDP Growth Ignored as Cable Rejects 1.3650
The British Pound (GBP/USD) retreated to the 1.3500 to 1.3520 trading block after sellers fiercely defended resistance at 1.3650. The sell-off occurred despite the Office for National Statistics reporting a 0.6% expansion in UK Q1 GDP data, which comfortably beat forecasts and accelerated from the 0.2% growth recorded in late 2025. Services sector expansion of 0.8% provided the primary growth engine for the British economy. Emerging domestic political uncertainty surrounding Prime Minister Keir Starmer prompted London session traders to trim long sterling exposure.
The strong domestic data failed to sustain a GBP/USD rally because the overarching dollar strength dictates broader forex flows. Today's US jobless claims reading of 211,000 adds to the tight labor market narrative established by the May Non-farm payrolls report, which showed the US economy adding 115,000 jobs in April against expectations of a 65,000 gain. The US unemployment rate held steady at 4.3%, and average hourly earnings ticked up by $0.06, providing the Federal Reserve with ample runway to maintain restrictive rates.
US Equities Ignore Yield Spike as Cisco Jumps 14.6%
The broader stock market absorbed the yield shock, with the S&P 500 gaining 0.38% to hit a fresh record high of 7,472.57. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 270.32 points to 49,963.52, putting the index within striking distance of the historic 50,000 milestone. Cisco Systems shares skyrocketed 14.6% to trade at $118.49 in the premarket session after the networking giant raised annual revenue guidance due to surging hyperscaler AI infrastructure orders and announced 4,000 layoffs. Nvidia stock climbed 3%, lifting the chipmaker's total market capitalization to $5.6 trillion after the US government cleared 10 Chinese firms to purchase H200 artificial intelligence chips.
Dollar Strength Crushes Alternative Assets as Gold Loses $4,700
The surging greenback exacted a heavy toll on non-yielding assets, driving Gold (XAU/USD) below the $4,700 psychological barrier to trade near $4,680 per troy ounce. Higher-for-longer US rate expectations mathematically decrease the appeal of holding zero-yield precious metals. Gold price analysis models indicate the metal requires a significant geopolitical catalyst to reverse the current dollar-driven downtrend, even as traders position for upcoming talks between Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping.
In the energy markets, global benchmark Brent crude futures experienced elevated volatility, trading in the $105.40 to $105.76 per barrel range. Prices edged up by 13 cents in early trading due to fears that a prolonged closure of the Strait of Hormuz will disrupt up to 20 million barrels per day of global crude flows. US benchmark WTI futures hovered above the century mark at $100.80 to $101.14 per barrel, gaining 12 cents earlier today. The S&P GSCI Commodity Index fell by 0.25% to 747.84 points, though it remains up 40.41% year-over-year.
Key Levels and Upcoming Catalysts for Your Trading Session
To manage risk in the remainder of the New York session, you must monitor the DXY reaction at the 98.50 resistance ceiling. A sustained breakout above this level opens the door for a test of 99.10, which will force EUR/USD below its 200-day moving average at 1.1680. If you are trading the euro, a daily close below 1.1680 invalidates the bullish structural trend that began in early 2026. You should also watch the 1.1650 extension level for potential buyer exhaustion.
For USD/JPY, your upside target sits at the psychological 158.00 handle, but you should place tight stops below 157.20 to protect against sudden intervention rhetoric from the Japanese Ministry of Finance. Looking ahead to tomorrow, you need to track the final revisions to US April retail sales, which initially printed at a 0.5% month-over-month increase. Traders will use any downward revision to the core control group sales figure as a catalyst to trigger a sudden dollar retracement and provide temporary relief for battered major currency pairs.

FN Pulse Editorial Team
Expert Trading Analysts
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