Geopolitical tensions have pushed the Dollar lower.

  • The conclusion of Operation Epic Fury is lifting risk sentiment.
  • Japan is expected to keep cracking down on speculators.

The US Dollar weakened after the White House announced the end of the two-month “Operation Epic Fury” and highlighted progress in talks with Iran. Markets are interpreting the developments as a sign of easing tensions in the Middle East, triggering a selloff in Brent crude and pushing the dollar index back toward two-month lows amid improving risk sentiment.

The more optimistic backdrop could support further gains in EUR/USD, though much will depend on how quickly oil prices decline. Damage to energy infrastructure across the Persian Gulf is expected to keep Brent and WTI well above the $65–70 range seen before the conflict erupted, maintaining underlying inflationary pressure.

US services PMI data continues to point to the strongest price pressures since 2022, while futures markets are increasingly pricing in the possibility of additional Fed tightening. That complicates any effort by Kevin Warsh to deliver the aggressive policy easing sought by Donald Trump. For now, however, traders remain focused almost entirely on developments in the Middle East.

The prospect of a ceasefire has already lifted EUR/USD toward 1.1760, and the pair could extend gains if de-escalation continues. On the other hand, a collapse in negotiations or renewed friction between the US and Iran would likely trigger a reversal, especially as Washington continues expanding its military presence in the Persian Gulf despite softer rhetoric.

Meanwhile, Wednesday’s sharp drop in USD/JPY has fuelled speculation that Japanese authorities intervened in the currency market again. Tokyo appears determined to discourage speculative dollar buying during periods of USD weakness.

Gold has also surged more than 3% on hopes of easing geopolitical tensions, climbing above $4,700. Lower oil prices reduce the risk of persistent inflation and lessen pressure on central banks to tighten policy further, potentially reviving demand for gold as a debasement hedge.

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