The U.S. Dollar pulled back from multi-week highs on June 8, breaking its recent rally even as geopolitical tensions in the Middle East intensified.
The U.S. Dollar retreated from its strongest level in two months Monday, as an escalation in the Middle East conflict triggered profit-taking in the greenback despite its traditional safe-haven appeal.
"The dollar's pullback suggests markets are weighing whether the geopolitical risk premium is already priced in after the recent rally," said Elena Fischer, geopolitical risk analyst at Edgen. "Traders are also recalibrating expectations around Fed policy ahead of this week's CPI data."
The dollar index slipped against a basket of major currencies, with EUR/USD recovering toward 1.0850 and GBP/USD climbing above 1.2750. USD/JPY eased from recent highs near 158.00, while USD/CAD gave back gains as oil prices rose on supply concerns tied to the Middle East. The move comes after the greenback had surged to a two-month peak last week, buoyed by growing bets that the Federal Reserve may need to raise interest rates later this year.
The divergence — a falling dollar despite escalating geopolitical risk — may signal that markets view the conflict as contained for now, or that the dollar's recent rally had run ahead of fundamentals. With the May Consumer Price Index report due June 10 and the Federal Open Market Committee meeting on June 16-17, currency markets face a week of potential catalysts that could determine whether this pullback becomes a broader reversal.
The dollar's retreat comes after a sustained rally that pushed it to two-month highs, driven by shifting expectations for Fed policy. The CME FedWatch Tool now assesses one or two rate hikes as relatively likely in 2026, a sharp reversal from earlier this year when cuts were the base case. Fed Governor Christopher Waller said in a May 22 speech in Frankfurt that "inflation is not headed in the right direction" and signaled support for removing the easing bias from the Fed's policy statement.
The last time the dollar weakened during a Middle East escalation was in October 2023, when the initial shock of the Hamas-Israel conflict gave way to a broader risk-off move that ultimately strengthened the greenback over the following weeks. That pattern suggests Monday's pullback may prove temporary if the conflict broadens.
Oil and Gold React to Escalation
Commodity markets showed a more conventional response to the geopolitical news. Brent crude rose toward $83 per barrel as traders priced in potential supply disruptions, while gold edged higher to around $2,360 per ounce, reflecting traditional safe-haven demand. The divergence between dollar weakness and commodity strength is unusual — typically a weaker dollar supports commodity prices, but the simultaneous geopolitical bid for gold and oil suggests distinct drivers at work.
The Middle East remains the primary wild card. The Strait of Hormuz handles about 21 percent of global oil trade, and any disruption to shipping lanes would have immediate consequences for energy prices and inflation expectations. For now, markets appear to be treating the escalation as contained, but the risk premium could expand rapidly if the situation deteriorates.
Fed Policy Crosscurrents
The dollar's trajectory this week will also depend on the May CPI report, due June 10. April data showed headline inflation at 3.8 percent and core inflation at 2.8 percent, both above the Fed's 2 percent target. A hot reading could reinforce the case for rate hikes and potentially reverse the dollar's pullback, while a softer print might validate the view that the Fed can hold steady.
Kevin Warsh's first FOMC meeting on June 16-17 is expected to mark a formal shift away from the Fed's easing bias, opening the door to potential rate hikes later in 2026. The strong May jobs report — the third consecutive month of solid job creation — has given the Fed cover to focus on inflation without worrying about labor market weakness. The dollar's direction over the coming weeks will hinge on whether inflation data forces the Fed's hand or allows it to maintain its current stance.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.