|

US Dollar Index : Rates-led support persists – OCBC

OCBC's FX Strategist Christopher Wong observes the Dollar Index (DXY) remains supported as higher UST yields and a softer risk tone underpin demand for the greenback. Christopher Wong emphasises the move is driven more by rates and risk-off dynamics than strong US fundamentals. He notes USD may stay bid near term, but upside could fade if yields turn lower and upcoming US data soften.

Greenback buoyed by higher yields

"USD regained some footing as higher UST yields and a softer risk tone brought back demand for the greenback."

"The latest move still looks rates-led, with long-end yields staying elevated. This move is less driven by a strong US fundamental story but more due to rates/risk-off story. So in the interim, USD may stay bid but the move may not extend if yields turn lower."

"There is no tier-1 data today, focus this week on FOMC minutes, US flash PMIs, initial jobless claims (21 May). The minutes may provide some colour on officials’ concern over inflation persistence while the PMIs will test whether US activity momentum is holding up or starting to soften under tighter financial conditions. A softer PMI print or less hawkish read from the minutes would be needed to take some heat out of the recent move."

DXYwas last at 99.30 levels. Daily momentum is bullish while RSI is near overbought conditions. Resistance here at 99.40 (23.6% fibo), 100.50/60 levels (2026 high). Support at 98.30/50 levels (21, 100, 200 DMAs), 98.10 (50% fibo retracement of 2026 low to high) and 97.50/60 levels (double bottom, 61.8% fibo retracement of 2026 low to high).

(This article was created with the help of an Artificial Intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor.)

Author

FXStreet Insights Team

The FXStreet Insights Team is a group of journalists that handpicks selected market observations published by renowned experts. The content includes notes by commercial as well as additional insights by internal and external analysts.

More from FXStreet Insights Team
Share:

Editor's Picks

GBP/USD dips below 1.3350 with bullish momentum losing steam

The British Pound ticks lower against the US Dollar Monday, attempting to close a seven-day rally, as tensions rise again in the Strait of Hormuz, one of the critical points in the peace process between Washington and Tehran. The GBP/USD pair trades near 1.3340 at the time of writing, down from 1.3387 highs last week, although it maintains a near-term bullish trend intact.

EUR/USD extends the range play above 1.1400 as Hormuz risks support USD

The EUR/USD pair extends its sideways consolidative price move during the Asian session on Tuesday, though it manages to hold comfortably above the 1.1400 mark. Moreover, spot prices remain well within striking distance of a nearly two-week high, touched last Thursday.

Gold drops toward $4,100 on fresh Iran tensions

Gold extends losses toward $4,100 early Tuesday, down for the second straight day. Tensions over the Strait of Hormuz remain elevated, lending some support to the safe-haven US Dollar and weighing on the bullion. However, receding bets on further Fed rate hikes could keep USD bulls on the back foot and help limit downside for the non-yielding yellow metal.

Ethereum: BitMine expands ETH accumulation amid crypto treasury pressure

Ethereum treasury firm BitMine Immersion Technologies scooped 42,197 ETH last week, extending its weekly accumulation streak of the top altcoin. The purchase has pushed the company's total ETH holdings to 5.74 million ETH worth roughly $10.27 billion at the time of writing.

The US Dollar just beat the Swiss Franc at its own safe-haven game

As the king among safe havens, the Swiss Franc is supposed to benefit from geopolitical shocks such as the Iran war. This time, it didn’t. The Swissie is nearly 6% below January’s peak against the USD after a sharp decline that came along with the war in Iran and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz.

Kevin Warsh offers no policy clues: Why markets still got their answer

Financial markets came to Sintra looking for clues about the Federal Reserve's (Fed) next move. They largely left with confirmation that Fed Chair Kevin Warsh intends to make those clues much harder to find.