Where we are: The US Dollar Index (DXY) is holding firm at 100.6, hovering near its highest level since May 2025 following yesterday’s post-FOMC surge. This aggressive extension has pushed the index past major near-term resistance, while the benchmark US 10-year Treasury yield consolidates at 4.457% after a volatile overnight session. Meanwhile, the front-end remains highly sensitive, with the US 2-year yield holding its hawkish post-meeting gains as traders digest the Fed’s newly aggressive stance. As we approach the New York open, the greenback is consolidating these massive gains ahead of the pre-holiday session.
What’s driving it: The dominant catalyst is the hawkish regime shift under newly minted Fed Chair Kevin Warsh, whose debut FOMC projections delivered an unexpected tightening bias. The dot plot has been revised to show roughly half of the committee backing a rate hike in 2026, forcing a violent hawkish repricing across the curves. This aggressive domestic policy shift is amplified by a global policy divergence as European central banks maintain more accommodative postures, widening yield differentials in favor of the greenback. Additionally, the broader risk-off mood triggered by Wednesday’s 500-point Dow sell-off continues to provide structural safe-haven support for the US unit.
- The FOMC’s hawkish shift, with approximately half of the policymakers now projecting at least one rate hike in 2026, completely upended the previous patient-hold narrative and reshaped the terminal rate outlook.
- The US 10-year Treasury yield has locked in near 4.457%, while real yields at 2.14% keep the cost of capital elevated and squeeze non-yielding assets.
- CFTC speculative positioning has reached the 81st percentile of its 52-week range, indicating a highly crowded long USD stance that presents clear squeeze risks if upcoming data fails to validate the hawkishness.
NY session focus: The immediate focus shifts to the 08:30 ET double-header of the Philly Fed Manufacturing Index (forecasted at 9.8) and weekly Unemployment Claims (expected at 225K), which will test the resilience of this hawkish move. With the Juneteenth federal holiday tomorrow draining liquidity on Friday, today’s session will likely see accelerated pre-weekend position squaring. The trade that is working is buying USD dips against the low-yielding European complex, whereas chasing the USD breakout at these multi-month highs is highly at risk due to the overextended speculative positioning. The pain trade for the street is a sharp, data-driven USD pullback that forces crowded longs to unwind in thin, pre-holiday liquidity.
