The U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) is up 0.24% this
week to 108.63 points, while the EURUSD has declined by 0.37% to 1.03270. U.S.
President Donald Trump escalated trade tensions by imposing new tariffs on Canada,
Mexico, and China last Saturday, with speculation mounting that the European
Union could be next. The Dollar fluctuated amid conflicting rumours about
Trump’s tariff plans, initially surging when reports suggested a delay until
March 1, pushing EURUSD up 0.4% to 1.04340. However, when the news was
officially refuted, the Euro fell to 1.03650 by Friday’s close.
As expected, Trump signed executive orders
enforcing the tariffs, sending the Euro sharply down by 1.5% to 1.02090 at
Monday’s open. Speculation of yet another postponement led to a full recovery
of the Euro’s losses, and Trump ultimately suspended tariffs on Canada and
Mexico for 30 days in exchange for concessions on border security and crime
enforcement. Meanwhile, reports surfaced of an upcoming meeting between Trump
and China’s President Xi Jinping. In response, China introduced a relatively
modest $20 billion tariff on U.S. imports, compared to the $450 billion in
levies imposed by Trump. This news strengthened the Chinese Yuan, while the S&P
500 declined by 0.8%.
Trump could escalate tensions further by
raising tariffs again or keep the situation stable while negotiating a new
trade deal. The former would push the Dollar even higher, while the latter
could weigh on it. The market remains in a state of uncertainty, with major
investors struggling to anticipate Trump’s next move. Large bets on the
Dollar’s rise, placed through the WisdomTree Bloomberg US Dollar Bullish Fund
(USDU), have been entirely unwound. The fund saw net outflows of $94.71 million
last week—the largest in years—confirming that institutional traders had been
bracing for a Dollar correction. Many closed their positions at 1.05330 with a
loss, unaware of Trump’s tariff actions on Saturday.
This creates both chaos and opportunity. With
institutional players lacking clear direction, technical signals may provide
better guidance. The EURUSD has entered a downside formation and needs to break
above 1.04000 to restore its upward momentum toward 1.04700–1.05700, which
serves as a key resistance zone before a potential move to 1.09500–1.10500. The
major catalyst for a shift could be January's Nonfarm Payrolls report on
Friday—unless the U.S.-China negotiations yield a finalized trade agreement
beforehand.
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