Dollar plummets as US data supports Fed rate cuts

US inflation resumes downtrend, retail sales stagnate - Dollar falls as investors add to Fed rate cut bets - Yen gains even as Japanese economy contracts - Wall Street at fresh records, gold rallies on US data
XM Group | 415 days ago

Cool inflation, flat retail sales hurt the dollar

The dollar tumbled against all its major peers yesterday after the US CPI data revealed that inflation in the world’s largest economy resumed its downtrend in April, allowing investors to ramp up their Fed rate cut bets.

Both the headline and core year-on-year CPI rates slid to 3.4% and 3.6% from 3.5% and 3.8%, respectively, in line with analysts’ forecasts. However, the monthly headline rate was a tad below expectations, which combined with a flat retail sales figure added to the narrative that the conditions for the Fed to start cutting rates are falling into place.

According to Fed funds futures, a 25bps reduction remains fully priced in for September, while the total number of basis points worth of cuts by the end of the year has risen to 51 from around 45 ahead of the release.

Today, the spotlight will likely turn to the initial jobless claims for last week, as well as to speeches by Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic, Cleveland President Loretta Mester, and Philadelphia President Patrick Harker.

Following the weaker than expected jobs report for April, traders may closely monitor the jobless claims numbers to see whether the softness rolled into May, and they may be eager to listen to what Fed officials have to say after the CPI data.

Yen gains, puts intervention risk at bay

The yen extended its advance into the Asian session today, even after data revealed that the Japanese economy contracted by more than expected in Q1, which is likely to complicate the Bank of Japan’s intention to hike interest rates again in the coming months.

Perhaps this was due to US Treasury yields extending their retreat in Tokyo trading and falling more than the Japanese ones. That said, although the drop in dollar/yen would likely keep Japanese authorities at bay, more data suggesting that a BoJ hike may not be warranted in the summer months could push the yen back down and thereby increase the chances for another round of intervention.

The Australian dollar was yesterday’s main gainer, along with the kiwi, but the advance was stopped today, with the risk-linked currency giving back some of yesterday’s winnings. That was due to Australia’s employment numbers, which showed that although the economy added more jobs than expected in April, the unemployment rate rose to 4.1% from 3.9%, taking rate hike expectations off the map.

Stock and gold traders cheer US inflation data

All three of Wall Street’s main indices skyrocketed to fresh record highs yesterday as the US inflation data convinced market participants that future cash flows are likely to remain supported due to expectations of more rate cuts by the Fed. Combined with a better-than-expected earnings season, bets that the Fed could cut rates deeper than previously thought may allow Wall Street investors to continue exploring uncharted territories.

Gold also benefited from the slide in the US dollar and Treasury yields, getting closer to its own record highs.  The fact that the metal defied the prior hawkish repricing about the Fed’s future course of action suggests that there may be more forces keeping it supported, one of which is the elevated purchases by the People’s Bank of China (PBoC).

Regulation: CySEC (Cyprus), FSC (Belize), DFSA (UAE), FSCA (South Africa)
read more
Why Silver could be the precious metal of 2025

Why Silver could be the precious metal of 2025

The gold bar is metallic yellow and slightly behind the silver bar, which is metallic white and positioned in front. Gold may still be the headline act, but silver’s no longer content playing second fiddle. In 2025, silver isn’t just glittering - it’s surging forward as one of the most exciting metals on the market.
Deriv | 1 day ago
Risk-on sentiment fades as tariffs return to the spotlight 

Risk-on sentiment fades as tariffs return to the spotlight 

Dollar surrenders gains posted after robust labour market report; Trump celebrates US budget bill approval; scheduled to sign it today; Most Fed members feel more comfortable as July rate cut is priced out; Oil steadies near $66, gold rally retains momentum;
XM Group | 1 day ago
ATFX Market Outlook 4th July 2025

ATFX Market Outlook 4th July 2025

The U.S. economy added 147,000 jobs in June, beating expectations of 110,000, while the unemployment rate fell to 4.1%. Traders are now betting that the Fed is unlikely to cut rates before September. Meanwhile, the House narrowly passed Trump's major fiscal bill by a vote of 218 to 214. U.S. stocks rallied on Thursday, hitting fresh record highs.
ATFX | 1 day ago
Nonfarm payrolls take center stage

Nonfarm payrolls take center stage

Slide in US private payrolls raise concerns about NFP miss - US strikes trade deal with Vietnam ahead of July 9 deadline - Pound feels the heat of fiscal shenanigans - S&P 500 hits fresh record high ahead of jobs report
XM Group | 2 days ago
Rate Shifts Steer FX Markets as Silver Holds Strong

Rate Shifts Steer FX Markets as Silver Holds Strong

On July 3, silver stays firm above $35.40 as Fed cut bets persist. EUR/USD holds near 1.1800, while GBP/USD lingers near 1.3585 ahead of UK jobs data. JPY strengthens after BoJ signals a hawkish pause. AUD/USD slips on weak trade surplus. Focus turns to US NFP and ISM data for market direction before the US holiday break.
Moneta Markets | 2 days ago