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Analysis

Greenback flexes as the globe flinches and now central banks dance on a razor’s edge

The dollar isn’t just holding up—it’s punching through resistance like a heavyweight that’s found its second wind. As markets whipsaw between central bank decisions and escalating Middle East flashpoints, the greenback has become less a safe haven and more a strategic stronghold—fortified by Fed patience and real-world chaos.

Let’s talk timing. The Fed’s latest presser was far less dovish than some expected. Powell walked out sounding like a man standing on a ridge—surveying a battlefield, not yet ready to advance, but sure as hell not retreating either. While inflation prints and labor metrics have softened at the edges, the Fed’s tone stayed composed, even borderline hawkish. Powell called the economy “solid,” brushed off labour cooling as “nothing concerning,” and made it clear that the bar for a Summer cut remains high.

The message was subtle, but the market heard it loud: no rush. The Fed’s posture—stay put, assess the tariff fallout, don’t front-run data—is giving the dollar breathing room to reassert dominance. It’s exactly this blend of strategic caution and credible resolve that’s helped push USD/JPY back above 145.00, eyeing the 145.40 highs like a sniper adjusting for wind.

Meanwhile, Powell’s inflation remarks struck a nerve. Tariffs aren’t just taxes—they’re time bombs with delayed detonations. Businesses are already preparing to pass the costs forward, and Powell knows full well that sticker shock at the consumer level could stick harder than expected. This isn’t just about whether inflation is transient—it’s about the lags, the passthrough, and the political powder keg if prices surge into Q3.

That uncertainty isn’t confined to spreadsheets. Out in the real world, we’re now on what could be a countdown to direct U.S. action against Iran. If the weekend brings fireworks over the Gulf, oil won’t just spike—it’ll detonate. And when crude goes vertical, capital runs to shelter. Energy-linked safe havens like the euro or franc lose their shine, while the dollar—backed by energy independence and a hesitant Fed—stands taller.

That’s the backdrop the euro is struggling against. With EUR/USD bleeding down toward 1.140 and no material catalysts from the ECB, euro bulls are praying for peace or a reversal in oil. But this isn’t about Lagarde speeches—it’s about headlines out of Tehran and Washington. And in that arena, the euro looks exposed.

Even the Swiss franc, traditionally the steely-eyed veteran of volatility, is blinking. The SNB is likely cutting today, joining the rate-cut chorus just as war drums beat louder. What was once a sanctuary now looks like a yield desert with limited upside.

So where does that leave us? Right in the middle of a macro storm. The Fed’s reluctance to ease has bought the dollar some serious credibility, especially with oil rising and Middle East risks metastasizing. The dot plot? Forget it. Even Powell told you not to look at the damn dots. What matters is this: the dollar is the only G10 currency that can ride out the geopolitical chaos without losing face or control.

Still, Euro dip buyers will lurk and return en masse at the first whiff of a ceasefire. But the FX market doesn’t wait for peace—it prices in the fog of war. And right now, that fog is thick enough to keep EUR/USD under pressure even if Brent doesn’t blast through $100.

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