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اردو
Rate Outlook Lifts US Dollar
Abstract:The U.S. dollar gained ground on elevated Federal Reserve rate expectations, while WTI crude oil dropped below $75 per barrel following a 60-day U.S.-Iran ceasefire that eased immediate energy supply concerns.

The U.S. dollar traded higher against a basket of major currencies as markets priced in a prolonged period of elevated Federal Reserve interest rates. Meanwhile, crude oil prices fell sharply following progress in U.S.-Iran negotiations that eased immediate supply constraints. This combination of resilient yields and falling energy prices continues to dictate capital flows across major exchange rates.
Broad Dollar Strength Meets Resilient Euro
The U.S. Dollar Index edged up to 101.01 as traders absorbed recent central bank commentary and rising treasury yields. The Federal Reserve held rates in the 3.50% to 3.75% range, while its latest dot plot flagged a high-interest regime for a protracted period. Despite the broader greenback bid, the euro gained ground, pushing EUR/USD up 0.34% to 1.143. European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde noted that regional inflation running above 3% requires a measured response, providing localized support for the single currency. Against other majors, the dollar lost slight ground to the Japanese yen at 161.601 and advanced against the British pound, sending GBP/USD down 0.15% to 1.324.
Crude Oil Drops On Geopolitical Progress
West Texas Intermediate crude for July delivery plunged $1.63, or 2.13%, to $74.97 per barrel. The sell-off followed the conclusion of high-level negotiations in Switzerland, where the U.S. and Iran signed a 14-point memorandum establishing a 60-day ceasefire. Adding direct downward pressure to energy benchmarks, the U.S. Treasury Department issued a general license authorizing the sale of Iranian crude oil through August 21. With the U.S. military confirming that commercial vessels are operating freely in the Strait of Hormuz, immediate supply risk premiums evaporated from the market.
Canadian Inflation Fails To Lift Loonie
The Canadian dollar tracked lower against the greenback, with USD/CAD trading at 1.416. Statistics Canada reported that domestic consumer prices increased 3.20% year-on-year in May, while core consumer prices rose 2.20% over the same period. Even with persistent domestic price growth, the drop in international crude oil prices stripped support from the commodity-linked currency, allowing the robust U.S. rate outlook to overpower the local inflation data.
What Is Driving It
Yield differentials and shifting geopolitical risk premiums dominate the current pricing structure. The Federal Reserves commitment to maintaining elevated interest rates maintains a strong baseline for the greenback. Simultaneously, diplomatic progress regarding the Strait of Hormuz relieves the immediate risk of an energy shock. This dynamic strips away commodity-linked support for oil-exporting currencies while reinforcing the dollar's yield advantage over its global peers.
Why It Matters
The divergence between restrictive central bank policy and softening energy prices isolates inflation drivers down to core economic activity. With crude oil rolling over and monetary authorities holding firm on rates, cross-asset correlations are shifting away from supply-driven panic toward pure yield differentials. This environment leaves commodity currencies explicitly tied to energy market headline risk while keeping major fiat pairs highly sensitive to subtle changes in central bank forward guidance.


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