Dollar firms as US-Iran hostilities flare, yen steadied by intervention risk
- The dollar index measured against key peers was a touch firmer at 98.235
The dollar strengthened as renewed US-Iran hostilities and rising oil prices created a risk-off mood. Markets are reassessing the conflict's impact while anticipating US jobs data and monitoring yen interventions.
- Renewed US-Iran hostilities and their impact on the dollar.
- Japanese yen's stability after Tokyo's currency market interventions.
- Anticipation of the critical US non-farm payrolls report.
HONG KONG: The dollar started Friday’s Asian session on a firm footing against most major currencies after renewed hostilities broke out between the US and Iran, while the Japanese yen held largely steady following fresh verbal jawboning from Tokyo.
The US and Iran exchanged fire and traded barbs again on Thursday, piling fresh pressure on a fragile month-long ceasefire as Iran reviews Washington’s proposal to end the war.
Oil prices jumped, with US crude futures rising as much as 3% in early trading, adding to the risk-off mood in currency markets.
The dollar index measured against key peers was a touch firmer at 98.235.
The rising tensions lifted the greenback for a second day from an over two-month low struck early in the week on hopes of a peace deal, putting it on track to finish the week largely flat.
“The path towards a lasting agreement is anything but linear,” wrote Chris Weston, head of research at Pepperstone.
“Traders have had to rethink the assumptions on the trajectory of the conflict and the normalization of vessel flows through Hormuz that had been made over the last couple of sessions.”
Markets are also bracing for the US non-farm payrolls report later on Friday, and it may take an outlier number, particularly a sufficiently weak one, to really move the dial on dollar volatility, he added.
Thai baht/US dollar steady on Thursday
Sterling traded at $1.3555 , headed for its first weekly loss since March, as investors awaited local election results that could heap further political pressure on Prime Minister Keir Starmer.
The euro was steady at $1.1727 , poised to end the week a touch firmer.
The Australian dollar fetched $0.72059 , and the New Zealand kiwi changed hands at $0.59365 , both on track to post a winning week on improved risk appetite in earlier days.
Traders remained focussed on the Japanese yen after recent interventions and verbal warnings from Tokyo kept sharp selling at bay. The yen was largely steady at 156.995 in early Asian deals and is set to end the week on a steady footing.
Japan faces no constraints on how often it can intervene in currency markets and is in daily contact with U.S. authorities, its top currency diplomat said on Thursday, reinforcing Tokyo’s resolve to defend the embattled yen.
“Against the current backdrop of elevated energy prices and rising yields, Japanese intervention can only act as a safety harness on the yen’s descent, but it can’t pull it to safety,” said Tony Sycamore, market analyst at IG.
Until macro and technical conditions change, the yen is likely to keep testing the Bank of Japan’s resolve, he added.


























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