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Dollar Slips As Stocks Recover

The dollar index (DXY00) today fell by -0.13%. The dollar is under pressure today as stocks rallied on a New York Times report that Iranian officials have offered to discuss the terms of an end to the war. The dollar returned to its worst level today after the Feb ADP employment report showed that US employers added more jobs than expected last month, and the Feb ISM services index unexpectedly expanded by the most in 3.5 years, hawkish aspects of the Fed’s policy.

US Feb ADP jobs change increased by +63,000, stronger than expected at +50,000.

The US Feb ISM services index unexpectedly rose +2.3 to 56.1, better than expectations for a drop to 53.5 and the strongest pace of expansion in 3.5 years. The Feb ISM services prices index unexpectedly fell -3.6 to an 11-month low of 63.0, weaker than expectations for a rise to 68.3.

Cleveland Fed President Beth Hammack said it is important to return inflation to the target and that “the Fed’s policy may hold for a long time.”

Swaps markets are down 2% with a -25 bp rate cut at the next policy meeting on March 17-18.

The dollar continues to see fundamental weakness as the FOMC is expected to cut interest rates by around -37 bp in 2026, while the BOJ is expected to raise rates by another +25 bp in 2026, and the ECB is expected to leave rates unchanged in 2026.

EUR/USD (^EURUSD) today increased by +0.16%. The weakness of the dollar today supports gains in the euro. Also, today’s economic reports of the Eurozone, which showed that the Eurozone Jan PPI rose more than expected and the unemployment rate of Jan unexpectedly fell to a low level, is hawkish for the ECB’s policy and supports the euro.

Eurozone Jan PPI rose +0.7% m/m and fell -2.1% y/y, stronger than expectations of +0.2% m/m and -2.6% y/y.

The Eurozone Jan unemployment rate fell -0.2 to a record low of 6.1%, reflecting a stronger than expected labor market of 6.2%.

Swaps cut to 0% chance of a -25 bp cut by the ECB at its next policy meeting on March 19.

USD/JPY (^USDJPY) today fell by -0.30%. The yen rose against the dollar today after Japan’s consumer confidence index rose more than expected to a five-year high of 6.75. Also, today’s comments from Japanese Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama boosted the yen when he said the Japanese government could take action to end excessive currency movements, including market intervention. In addition, today’s -3% decline in the Nikkei Stock Index to a 3.5-week low caused some safe demand for the yen.

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