The U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) is rising by 0.18%
to 106.91 points this week, while EURUSD is down by 0.33% to 1.04560. The
dollar is recovering after last week’s sharp decline, when it lost 1.60% to the
euro, pushing EURUSD to 1.05110—the highest level since January 27. This drop
was triggered by U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariff announcements targeting
Colombia, Canada, Mexico, China, and steel and aluminium imports into the U.S.
Currently, EURUSD appears overbought, and a
corrective move to the 1.03800–1.04400 range could relieve this tension.
Further price action will largely depend on U.S.-Russia talks in Saudi Arabia
and Trump’s evolving stance on economic policies. Last week, the president
countered inflation concerns, which should have weakened the dollar, by pushing
for further interest rate cuts and signaling a reassessment of U.S. tariffs.
His unexpected interventions caused sharp swings in the currency market, with EURUSD
first plunging to 1.03150 before surging again.
Key upcoming events
include the release of FOMC Minutes on Wednesday and PMI indexes on Friday, both
of which could support the Dollar. Fed officials continue
to issue hawkish statements, reinforcing the Greenback’s strength. However,
Trump remains a wildcard, with his comments on Tuesday potentially influencing
market sentiment. If peace talks yield positive developments, the dollar may
weaken against major currencies.
Institutional investors are in a wait-and-see
mode. The WisdomTree Bloomberg US Dollar Bullish Fund (USDU) reported neutral
flows last week, suggesting investors are looking for clearer signals before
taking positions.
From a technical perspective, EURUSD remains biased
to the upside. The pair has reached its primary targets but must break above
1.05700 to extend gains towards 1.09500–1.10500. A deeper correction into the
1.03800–1.04400 range could serve as a launchpad for the next leg higher.
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