- The precious metal has been supported by speculation of a potential de-escalation in Middle East tensions.
- At the same time, markets are also reacting to reports that the US and Japan could pursue coordinated currency intervention.
The US dollar recovered from earlier selling pressure amid lingering uncertainty over a rapid resolution to the Middle East conflict, alongside stronger-than-expected US economic data. ADP reported a 109K increase in private sector employment in April, marking the strongest reading since the beginning of 2025. The resilience in the labour market, combined with persistent inflation pressures, helped the DXY rebound 0.5% from its intraday lows, recovering roughly half of its earlier losses on Wednesday. However, the recovery proved short-lived.

Markets are also focused on renewed US–Iran diplomatic efforts, with talks expected to resume by 15 May. As often seen in geopolitics, markets tend to price in outcomes ahead of confirmation. Rumours of de-escalation initially pushed EUR/USD to its highest level since February near 1.1800, before subsequent uncertainty triggered a pullback.
At the same time, geopolitical risks are increasingly seen as more damaging for Europe than for the US. Additional pressure comes from renewed tariff threats by Donald Trump, including potential increases on European auto imports from 15% to 25%. Slowing growth combined with inflationary pressure from higher energy costs is raising stagflation concerns in the eurozone, forcing the ECB into a more cautious policy stance. Even if further rate hikes occur, they are expected to be limited, leaving interest rate differentials supportive of the US dollar and capping EUR/USD upside.
Beyond geopolitics, currency markets are also reacting to developments in Japan. While fundamentals favour a stronger US dollar versus the yen, any coordinated effort to weaken the dollar could impose significant strain on Tokyo. Discussions around possible joint intervention—drawing comparisons to the 1985 Plaza Accord—have resurfaced, with US officials expected to meet Japanese counterparts to discuss foreign exchange stability.
Meanwhile, gold has benefited from easing Middle East tensions, posting its strongest daily gain since late March. The metal is also supported by shifting inflation expectations following the decline in oil prices, which reduces the likelihood of aggressive Fed tightening into 2026. However, upcoming US data releases remain a key catalyst, and any downside surprise could provide fresh momentum for further upside in gold.
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