Dollar rises as war with Iran continues

Dollar rises as war with Iran continues
Dollar rises as war with Iran continues

The dollar index (DXY00) rose to a 10.5-month high on Monday and ended with a gain of 0.40%. The dollar gained on Monday on safe-haven support amid concerns about a protracted war in Iran. President Trump told the Financial Times on Sunday that he wants to “take Iran’s oil” and could seize the Kharg Island export hub, which would involve US ground troops and mark a major escalation of the conflict. The dollar’s gains were limited as Monday’s sharp drop in Treasury yields weakened dollar interest rate differentials.

The Dallas Fed’s March US manufacturing activity survey fell from -0.4 to -0.2, weaker than expectations for an increase to 2.0.

Fed Chair Powell said inflation expectations are well anchored and the FOMC will meet its 2% inflation target. He added: “It is too early to know what the economic effects will be” of the war with Iran.

Swap markets are pricing in 3% odds of a +25bp rate hike at the April 28-29 FOMC meeting.

The dollar remains weakened by a poor outlook for interest rate differentials: the FOMC is expected to cut interest rates by at least -25 bps in 2026, while the BOJ and ECB are expected to raise rates by at least +25 bps in 2026.

EUR/USD (^EURUSD) fell to a one-week low on Monday and ended down -0.45%. The euro came under pressure on Monday from a stronger dollar. Additionally, economic news on Monday showing the Eurozone Economic Sentiment Index fell more than expected to a six-month low was bearish for the Euro. Furthermore, Monday’s +3% rally in crude oil prices to a three-week high is negative for the euro and the eurozone economy, as Europe imports most of its energy. Losses in the euro were limited on Monday after the German March CPI posted its biggest year-on-year rise in two years, a hawkish factor for ECB policy.

The Eurozone Economic Sentiment Index fell -1.6 to a six-month low of 96.6, weaker than expectations of 96.7.

German March CPI (EU harmonized) rose +1.2% MoM and +2.8% YoY, right in line with expectations, with the +2.8% YoY increase the largest YoY increase in two years.

Swaps price in a 52% probability of a +25bp rate hike by the ECB at the April 30 policy meeting.

USD/JPY (^USDJPY) fell -0.40% on Monday. The yen rebounded from a 1.75-year low against the dollar on Monday as comments from Japan’s top foreign exchange official sparked short covering after he said the government could take bold steps in currency markets if the yen continues to weaken. The yen added to its gains on Monday when Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda said the Bank of Japan will “closely watch currency movements,” fueling speculation that the Bank of Japan could raise interest rates at next month’s meeting to support the yen. The drop in Treasury yields on Monday also supported the yen.

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