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اردو
USD Holds Near Highs as Oil Drops: Markets Shift from “Inflation Fear” to “Peace Deal Validation”
Sommario:As we enter Friday, 12 June 2026, the FX market has shifted focus. Earlier this week, traders were pricing stronger US inflation, the ECBs first rate hike in three years, and Middle East energy risks.
As we enter Friday, 12 June 2026, the FX market has shifted focus. Earlier this week, traders were pricing stronger US inflation, the ECBs first rate hike in three years, and Middle East energy risks. Today, attention has moved to a possible US-Iran peace agreement, the potential reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, and a sharp drop in oil prices.
During the Asian and early European sessions, the US Dollar Index held near 99.68. USD/JPY stayed close to 160, keeping Japan intervention risk in focus. EUR/USD edged higher toward 1.158 after the ECB rate hike, while GBP/USD traded around 1.341 after weaker UK GDP data. Brent crude fell toward the 87-dollar area as markets priced in a possible US-Iran agreement as early as this weekend.
1. USD Holds Highs, but Safe-Haven Demand Cools
The dollar is no longer extending sharply higher, but it is not breaking down either. Recent dollar strength came from strong US employment, high inflation, and safe-haven demand linked to Middle East risks. Todays oil price drop has led markets to reassess whether energy-driven inflation pressure may ease if Hormuz reopens.
Still, the dollar trend has not clearly reversed. US PPI remains strong, and the Fed is unlikely to shift quickly toward easing. Lower oil prices reduce safe-haven demand, but strong US inflation data continues to support the dollar through rate expectations.
2. US PPI Keeps Rate Support Intact
The latest US May PPI showed upstream inflation pressure remains elevated. Final demand PPI rose 1.1% month-on-month and 6.5% year-on-year, with both goods and services prices moving higher.
This matters because strong PPI suggests business costs remain high. If companies pass these costs on to consumers, future CPI and PCE inflation may stay under pressure. Therefore, even with oil falling, markets are unlikely to return quickly to a strong Fed rate-cut narrative.
For the dollar, the logic is clear: lower oil weakens safe-haven buying, but strong PPI keeps rate support in place.
3. Oil Is Todays Key Driver
Oil is the main variable today. Brent crude fell toward 86–87 dollars per barrel, while WTI also moved lower, both near two-month lows. The move was driven by expectations that the US and Iran may reach a peace agreement after planned military action was reportedly cancelled.
Lower oil prices may reduce global inflation expectations, ease pressure on energy-importing economies such as Japan, India, the UK and the eurozone, and improve risk sentiment across equities and high-beta currencies.
However, the market is trading “peace expectations,” not “peace confirmation.” If the deal fails or Hormuz reopening is delayed, oil could rebound quickly.
4. ECB Supports the Euro, but Growth Remains a Concern
The ECB raised rates by 25 basis points, lifting the deposit rate to 2.25% and the main refinancing rate to 2.40%. This was its first rate hike since 2023, driven by inflation pressure from energy prices and Middle East supply risks.
The rate hike provides short-term support for the euro. Lower oil prices also help the eurozone, which relies heavily on energy imports. However, EUR/USD may still struggle to build a strong uptrend because ECB tightening is driven by inflation pressure, not strong growth.
The euros next move depends on whether the ECB keeps emphasizing inflation risks, and whether US data allows the dollar to maintain its rate advantage.
5. USD/JPY Remains Highly Sensitive
USD/JPY remains close to 160, keeping Japan intervention risk alive. Lower oil prices should help Japan as an energy importer, but the wide US-Japan rate gap continues to pressure the yen.
Fundamentals still support the dollar, but policy risk limits aggressive upside chasing. If oil keeps falling, the yen may find some relief. If US yields rise again, USD/JPY could retest levels above 160.
6. GBP, AUD, NZD and CNH: Risk Sentiment Improves, but USD Still Matters
Sterling remains pressured after UK April GDP unexpectedly contracted by 0.1%. Lower oil prices and softer dollar momentum may help GBP/USD recover, but weak domestic growth limits upside.
AUD and NZD are benefiting from improved risk sentiment as oil falls and global inflation fears ease. However, their rebounds still depend on China demand, commodity prices, and whether the dollar stays near recent highs.
The offshore yuan also faces a better external environment as lower oil prices reduce pressure on Asian energy importers. Still, with the Dollar Index near 99.68 and US PPI remaining strong, CNH upside may remain limited.
7. Gold: Uncertainty Helps, High Rates Pressure
Gold has stabilized but remains pressured by high US rates. Geopolitical uncertainty usually supports gold, but strong US CPI and PPI keep investors focused on the risk that the Fed may stay hawkish for longer. Gold is more likely to recover if oil continues to fall, the dollar weakens, and US yields move lower.
Risk Disclosure: FX & CFD trading involves substantial risk of capital loss. Please trade responsibly.
Disclaimer:
Le opinioni di questo articolo rappresentano solo le opinioni personali dell’autore e non costituiscono consulenza in materia di investimenti per questa piattaforma. La piattaforma non garantisce l’accuratezza, la completezza e la tempestività delle informazioni relative all’articolo, né è responsabile delle perdite causate dall’uso o dall’affidamento delle informazioni relative all’articolo.
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