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Monday Jun 29 2026 06:56
6 min

The US dollar is heading into the end of June with strong support from three major drivers: geopolitical risk, higher oil prices and a more hawkish Federal Reserve outlook.
The US Dollar Index, which measures the greenback against a basket of major currencies, was trading near 101.36 on Monday. That left the index on track for a monthly gain of around 2.5%, which would mark its strongest monthly performance in almost a year.
The latest move has been fuelled by renewed tensions around the Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s most important energy shipping routes. Fresh disruption in the region pushed oil prices higher and encouraged investors to move back into defensive assets, including the dollar.
At the same time, higher oil prices can make inflation harder to control. That matters for forex markets because sticky inflation may reduce the chance of US rate cuts. When traders expect US interest rates to stay higher for longer, the dollar often becomes more attractive compared with lower-yielding currencies.
The dollar’s strength is not only about safe-haven demand. It is also being supported by a shift in expectations around the Federal Reserve.
Markets have become less confident that the Fed will cut rates this year after a more hawkish policy tone from Chair Kevin Warsh. If inflation risks remain elevated and the labour market stays resilient, traders may continue to price in a tighter US policy path.
That has helped revive the “US exceptionalism” trade, where the dollar benefits from relatively stronger US growth, higher yields and tighter monetary policy expectations compared with other major economies.
For forex traders, this means the dollar may remain supported as long as US data continues to justify the higher-for-longer rate narrative.
The Japanese yen remained one of the weakest major currencies, with USD/JPY trading near 161.75.
That level keeps the pair close to territory where traders are watching closely for possible Japanese intervention. The 160 area has been widely viewed as a key psychological zone, although Tokyo has so far relied mainly on verbal warnings rather than direct market action.
The yen’s weakness reflects the wide gap between US and Japanese interest rates. As long as US yields remain high and the Bank of Japan moves cautiously, the yen may struggle to recover meaningfully.
However, intervention risk is now a major short-term risk for USD/JPY traders. Any direct action from Japanese authorities could trigger a sharp pullback in the pair.
The dollar’s strength has also weighed on other major currencies.
The euro traded near $1.1387 after touching a 13-month low last week. It was heading for a monthly decline of about 2.3%.
Sterling slipped toward $1.3198 and was down roughly 2% for June, as traders weighed broader dollar strength and relative policy expectations between the Fed and the Bank of England.
Risk-sensitive currencies performed even worse. The Australian dollar traded near $0.6885, leaving it on course for a monthly decline of about 4.1%. The New Zealand dollar was near $0.5635 and down almost 5.9% for the month.
These currencies often struggle when global risk sentiment weakens, commodity-linked uncertainty rises, or investors prefer the liquidity of the US dollar.
The next major catalyst for the dollar is the US jobs report.
Payrolls, wage growth and unemployment data will help traders judge whether the labour market remains strong enough to support the Fed’s hawkish stance. A stronger-than-expected report could reinforce the view that US rates may stay elevated for longer, which would likely support the dollar.
A weaker report, however, could challenge the dollar rally. If labour data shows clear signs of cooling, markets may start to price in rate cuts again. That would reduce one of the dollar’s key supports.
The European Central Bank’s annual forum is also in focus this week. Comments from ECB President Christine Lagarde and Fed Chair Kevin Warsh may offer fresh clues on inflation, financial conditions and the global rate outlook.
For now, the dollar’s advantage remains intact.
Gulf tensions are keeping haven demand alive, oil prices are adding to inflation concerns, and Fed expectations continue to favour higher US rates. Together, these factors have helped the greenback outperform most major currencies in June.
However, the rally is not without risks. A softer US jobs report, a rapid easing in Gulf tensions, falling oil prices or Japanese intervention in USD/JPY could all trigger volatility.
In the short term, the US dollar may remain supported while geopolitical uncertainty and Fed repricing dominate market sentiment. But with key labour data and central bank commentary ahead, traders should expect the next move to depend heavily on incoming macro signals.
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