Dollar Steadies Ahead of Powell Speech

2025-10-14 07:30 By Jam Kaimo Samonte 1 min. read

The dollar index hovered around 99.3 on Tuesday, showing little direction as investors awaited remarks from Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell later in the session.

His speech comes amid a prolonged US government shutdown that has limited the release of key economic data, prompting markets to look toward upcoming bank earnings for signals on the economy’s health.

The Fed is widely expected to deliver another quarter-point rate cut this month following a similar move in September, with another reduction anticipated in December.

Meanwhile, investors continued to track fast-evolving US-China trade developments ahead of a potential Trump-Xi meeting in South Korea later this month.

In the latest escalation, China imposed restrictions on five US units of Hanwha Ocean in response to Washington’s probes into Chinese maritime, logistics, and shipbuilding sectors.



News Stream
Dollar Declines
The dollar index fell to 99.5 on the first trading day of April, hitting its lowest level in a week amid hopes for a swift resolution to the Middle East conflict. President Donald Trump said the US would wrap up its military campaign in Iran in two or three weeks with or without a deal. Still, traders remain cautious as more US troops are being deployed to the region and the Strait of Hormuz remains largely closed. Market participants are now awaiting Trump’s nationwide address on the Iran situation later in the day. Last month, the dollar gained 2.3% as investors sought the safe-haven asset amid fears of a prolonged war. The currency was also supported by diminishing expectations of Federal Reserve rate cuts this year, as the conflict drove oil prices sharply higher, stoking inflation concerns. Meanwhile, Fed Chair Jerome Powell appeared to reassure markets, saying that long-term US inflation expectations remain grounded.
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Dollar Largely Steady
The dollar index hovered around 99.8 on the first trading day of April, having risen 2.3% in March, supported by safe-haven demand amid lingering uncertainty over the trajectory of the Middle East conflict. While President Donald Trump suggested that the war could end within two to three weeks, traders remain cautious as more US troops are being deployed to the region and the Strait of Hormuz remains largely closed. Market participants are now awaiting Trump’s nationwide address on the Iran situation later in the day. The dollar was further supported by diminishing expectations of Federal Reserve rate cuts this year, as the conflict drove oil prices sharply higher, stoking inflation concerns. Meanwhile, Fed Chair Jerome Powell appeared to reassure markets, saying that long-term US inflation expectations remain grounded.
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Dollar Set for Best Month Since July 2025
The dollar index has climbed nearly 3% this month, reaching 100 and heading for its strongest performance since July 2025. The escalating Middle East conflict, now in its fifth week, has disrupted energy markets, shaken economic outlooks, and sparked a flight to the world’s primary reserve currency. With Tehran effectively blocking the Strait of Hormuz and threatening Red Sea shipping, global energy prices have surged, bolstering the dollar as the US remains the world’s top oil producer. Adding to the currency’s strength, expectations for Federal Reserve rate cuts this year have faded amid renewed inflation concerns, despite Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s reassurance that long-term US inflation expectations remain anchored. Powell acknowledged that the central bank’s current policy stance provides flexibility to assess the economic fallout from the Iran war, but traders have grown increasingly cautious.
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