A falling dollar as crude oil rises limits expectations of a Fed rate cut


The Dollar Index (DXY00) is up +0.88% at a 5-week high today. The dollar rose today as today’s rise in oil prices boosted inflation expectations to a 8.25-month high and reduced the chance of additional Fed rate cuts, a supportive factor for the dollar. Also, today’s stock selloff has encouraged liquidity demand for the dollar. In addition, today’s expected Fed ISM manufacturing report was supportive of the dollar. Finally, today’s higher T-note yields strengthened the dollar interest rate differential.

The February US ISM manufacturing index fell -0.2 to 52.4, stronger than expectations of 51.5. February’s ISM prices sub-index rose +11.5 to a 3.5-year high of 70.5, stronger than expectations of 60.0.

Exchange markets are cutting odds on a -25 bp rate cut at the next policy meeting on March 17-18 at 2%.

The dollar continues to see fundamental weakness as the FOMC is expected to cut interest rates by -50 bp in 2026, while the BOJ is expected to raise rates by another +25 bp in 2026, and the ECB is expected to keep rates unchanged in 2026.

EUR/USD (^EURUSD) is down -0.91% today and has hit a 5-week low. Dollar strength weighs on the euro today. Also, today’s economic news that German john retail sales showed the biggest drop in 19 months is bearish for the euro. In addition, today’s +49% increase in European natural gas prices to a 1-year high threatens to slow economic growth and spur inflation in the Eurozone, negative factors for the Euro.

German John retail sales fell -0.9% m/m, weaker than expectations for unchanged m/m and the biggest decline in 19 months.

Swaps discount a 1% chance of a -25 bp rate cut by the ECB at its next policy meeting on March 19.

USD/JPY (^USDJPY) is up +1.05% today. The yen fell to a 3-week low against the dollar today, as crude oil prices hit a 8.25-month high, a negative factor for Japan’s economic growth. Also, today’s higher T-note yields are lower for the yen.

Japan’s February S&P manufacturing PMI rose +0.2 to 53.0 from a previously reported 52.8, the strongest pace of expansion in 3.75 years.

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