
The US Dollar Index (DXY), which tracks the performance of the US Dollar (USD) against six major currencies, is able to print a third consecutive day of gains, trading around 104.00 at the time of writing on Friday. The DXY tries to move away from the 2025 low at 103.20 reached on Tuesday, after the Financial Times reported European countries are drawing up plans to take on responsibilities for the continent's defence from the United States (US), including a pitch to the Trump administration for a managed transfer over the next five to 10 years, which would reshape the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO). The European bloc wants to avoid a disorganised exit from the US in the treaty.
Meanwhile, pressure is mounting with April 2 as the deadline for the US to impose reciprocal tariffs. Several traders and analysts are trying to grasp the impact the tariffs might have on markets, though for now, this remains unclear. US Federal Reserve (Fed) Chairman Jerome Powell said in the press conference following the latest Fed meeting on Wednesday that levies should have a transitory effect on inflation.
Markets seem to believe those words, however, traders remain doubtful. The last time Powell said effects were transitory, the Fed had to hike from 0.25% to 5.5% its policy rate in the post-covid era when inflation appeared to be sticky, not transitory. It took the central bank more than a year to confirm that.
This Friday will be marked as Quadruple Witching day. Quadruple Witching is an event in financial markets when four different sets of futures and options expire on the same day, and investors need to decide whether to sell and buy back their positions or just sell them.
At 13:05, Federal Reserve Bank of New York President John Williams delivered keynote remarks at the 2nd Biennial Macroeconometric Caribbean Conference in Nassau, Bahamas.Fed's Williams said neutral rates are the best position right now to assess the impact of tariffs.
At 15:00 GMT, US President Donald Trump will give a speech from the Oval Office.
Equities are dropping lower on Friday. In China, the Hang Seng and the Shanghai Shenzhen indexes both dropped over 1.50%. This fueled another rout in European and US equities, which are also down over 1%. Concerns are mounting as US corporate profit earnings look bleak, and several central banks – including the Federal Reserve, the Bank of Japan and the Bank of England – have expressed uncertainty about the economy due to tariffs, affecting their policy-making.
According to the CME Fedwatch Tool, the probability of interest rates remaining at the current range of 4.25%-4.50% in May's meeting is at 83.1%. For June, the odds for borrowing costs being lower stand at 70.0%.
The US 10-year yield trades around 4.22%, heading back to its five-month low of 4.10% printed on March 4.
Source: Fxstreet
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