The U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) is down 0.51% this
week to 99.58 points, while the EURUSD pair is trading flat around 1.1350,
consolidating last week’s sharp gains. The Euro surged 4.6% to 1.1473—its
highest level since February 2022—largely driven not by macroeconomic
fundamentals, but by the intensifying trade standoff between the United States
and China.
The initial boost for the Euro came on April
3, following President Donald Trump’s announcement of reciprocal tariffs
targeting imports from 185 countries. In response, the EURUSD spiked 2.8% to
1.1146 during Asian trading, before retracing to 1.0890. A renewed rally
followed when China dismissed U.S. demands to withdraw its retaliatory 34%
tariffs. As Trump escalated the situation with a 104% tariff on Chinese goods,
the Euro added another 1.1% to reach 1.1089. China countered with an 84%
tariff, prompting Trump to raise U.S. tariffs to a staggering 145%, fueling
another 4.7% surge in the EURUSD over the next several days.
However, with both nations now locked in a
high-stakes stalemate, the potential for further tariff escalation appears
limited. Neither side holds a clear upper hand. The U.S. cannot quickly replace
Chinese imports, and the burden of the 145% tariff is expected to feed into
stagflationary pressures over the next two years. Conversely, any further
retaliatory move from China—whether overt or through silence—could trigger the
country’s first recession in five decades. Yet, political resolve remains
stronger in Beijing, while President Trump faces mounting criticism from U.S.
business leaders, whose companies have reportedly suffered trillions in market
cap losses.
Despite speculation about the Bank of Japan
selling U.S. Treasuries, most analysts point to China as the likely force
behind the recent bond market stress. Some suggest there may even be
coordinated action between China and Japan.
Institutional investors seemed to anticipate
the Dollar’s decline. Over a two-week span in March and early April, they sold
$67.3 million of the WisdomTree Bloomberg U.S. Dollar Bullish Fund (USDU).
However, last week saw a reversal, with the fund reporting $14.6 million in net
inflows, as investors took profits on the Euro and rotated back into the
Dollar. The trade war now appears to be cooling, especially after the U.S.
lowered tariffs on Chinese electronics to 20%, signaling a temporary pause.
Markets are now watching to see whether Beijing will reciprocate.
Macroeconomic data is likely to play a
secondary role in shaping near-term currency trends. U.S. retail sales for
March, due Wednesday, are expected to show solid growth, which would support
the Greenback. That same day, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell will speak at
the Economic Club of Chicago, followed by a European Central Bank (ECB) meeting
on Thursday, where a quarter-point rate cut is widely expected.
Technically, the EURUSD has exhausted most of
its immediate upside potential and remains in extreme overbought territory. A
breakdown below the 1.1320–1.1340 support zone could trigger a reversal, with
intermediate targets at 1.1100–1.1150 and a broader downside range between
1.0600–1.0700.
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