Where we are: The DXY is currently trading at 98.33, down 0.39% on the day, with an intraday range of 98.07-98.97. This is a clear break lower from yesterday’s close around 98.73, and the DXY is testing the bottom of its recent range. The overnight weakness in US yields is weighing on the Greenback.
What’s driving it: Dollar weakness is primarily driven by the overnight dip in US Treasury yields, with the 10-year currently at 4.389%. The market appears to be positioning ahead of today’s 08:30 ET data dump, particularly Advance GDP, Core PCE, and the Employment Cost Index, all of which will inform the outlook for Fed policy. While the Fed reaffirmed its data-dependent stance at its March meeting, with the dot plot pointing to two cuts in 2026, the recent hawkish tilt has diminished rate-cut expectations and even brought a rate hike in 2027 into play. Geopolitical tensions, previously a source of Dollar support, have eased somewhat, reducing safe-haven demand.
- US 2-year yield is down 3.5 bps to 3.900%, signaling a slight easing of near-term rate expectations.
- Speculator positioning in the Dollar is crowded long, at the 94th percentile, increasing the risk of a squeeze on any data disappointments.
- The 10-year breakeven inflation rate is relatively stable at 2.46%, suggesting inflation expectations are not currently driving the yield move.
NY session focus: All eyes are on the 08:30 ET data deluge. A strong GDP print above 2.2% coupled with a firm Employment Cost Index above 0.8% would likely trigger a Dollar bounce, targeting a retest of the 99.00 level. Conversely, weaker-than-expected figures could see the DXY test the 98.00 level and potentially break lower, triggering a squeeze on crowded longs. The trade that’s working right now is short Dollar against risk-on currencies, but this is at risk if the data surprises to the upside. The pain trade for the Dollar is a sustained rally driven by hotter-than-expected inflation data, forcing the market to fully price in a 2027 rate hike.
