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US Payroll Softness, Fading Fed Hike Bets, and a Dollar on…

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Weaker payrolls fade Fed hike bets, pressuring the Dollar; diverging ECB path and geopolitical risk premiums complicate the moves.

A Dovish Repricing of Fed Expectations Is Undercutting the Dollar

The dominant force across markets right now is a sharp downward revision in expectations for Federal Reserve rate hikes, triggered by a weaker-than-expected Nonfarm Payrolls report. The Dollar is bearing the brunt of this shift, sliding broadly as the tightening premium that had supported it gets stripped out. The knock-on effects are visible everywhere: EUR/USD is poised for its first weekly gain in three weeks, GBP/USD is grinding higher though still capped below 1.3400, and Gold has found enough of a bid to snap a multi-week losing streak. All eyes now turn to next week’s FOMC minutes, which traders will comb for any signal that a divided Committee, under new Chair Kevin Warsh, could pivot from its current hold back toward hikes.

Diverging Central-Bank Paths Are Quietly Reshaping the Crosses

Beneath the Dollar story lies a more nuanced tension between central banks moving at different speeds. The Euro is carrying its own drag, with markets scaling back expectations for an ECB rate hike in 2026, which tempers EUR/USD’s advance even as the Dollar weakens. The wider picture is one of genuinely uncertain reaction functions: the Fed’s own dot plot reveals policymakers split on whether further tightening is warranted, leaving rate differentials — the primary engine behind pairs like USD/JPY — unusually hard to handicap. This is a market where relative policy, not just the Dollar’s direction, is doing the heavy lifting.

Geopolitical Risk Keeps a Floor Under the Safe Havens

Finally, a persistent geopolitical risk premium is providing an intermittent counterweight to the Dollar’s softness. Renewed US-Iran hostilities and Israeli strikes on Lebanon are keeping risk sentiment on edge, periodically reviving safe-haven demand that cuts against the broader bearish Dollar narrative and simultaneously reinforces Gold’s underlying bid. It is a reminder that, for all the focus on rate expectations, headline risk can reassert itself at any moment and complicate the cleaner macro trade.

Top upcoming economic events:

1. 07/06/2026: Euro Retail Sales (YoY)

As a high-impact indicator for the Eurozone, the year-over-year Retail Sales figure provides critical insight into consumer spending habits. Since consumption drives a significant portion of economic growth, this data helps analysts determine if the Eurozone economy is expanding or cooling, directly influencing investor sentiment toward the Euro.

2. 07/06/2026: ISM Services PMI

The ISM Services PMI is a premier leading indicator for the U.S. economy, as the services sector accounts for over 80% of total output. A reading above 50 signals expansion, while below 50 indicates contraction. Because it captures real-time input from purchasing managers, it often predicts future shifts in GDP and inflation before official government data is released.

3. 07/08/2026: RBNZ Interest Rate Decision & Policy Review

The Reserve Bank of New Zealand’s (RBNZ) decision on the Official Cash Rate (OCR) is the primary tool for managing inflation and economic stability.Market participants watch this closely because the OCR sets the base price of money for the banking system, directly impacting mortgage rates, business lending, and the value of the New Zealand Dollar.

4. 07/08/2026: FOMC Minutes

Released roughly three weeks after the Federal Open Market Committee meeting, these minutes provide a vital “behind-the-scenes” look at the Federal Reserve’s internal debate.For investors, these documents are essential for gauging the consensus among Fed officials regarding future interest rate paths, which can cause significant volatility in global stock, bond, and currency markets.

5. 07/09/2026: Chinese Consumer Price Index (YoY)

Given China’s position as the world’s second-largest economy, its inflation data is a bellwether for global demand.Higher or lower-than-expected CPI figures can signal changes in the spending power of the Chinese consumer, which directly impacts global supply chains, commodity markets, and the earnings of international firms with exposure to the Chinese market.

6. 07/10/2026: Eurozone Harmonized Index of Consumer Prices (YoY)

The HICP is the primary measure of inflation for the Eurozone and is used by the European Central Bank (ECB) to set monetary policy.When inflation trends diverge from the ECB’s targets, it leads to rapid re-adjustments in market expectations for interest rate hikes or cuts, often resulting in significant moves in the EUR/USD exchange rate.

7. 07/10/2026: Canadian Unemployment Rate

As a lagging indicator, the unemployment rate provides a definitive look at the health of the Canadian labor market.High unemployment can lead to lower consumer demand and might signal to the Bank of Canada that it needs to cut interest rates to stimulate the economy, making this a high-impact release for the Canadian Dollar.

8. 07/10/2026: Canadian Net Change in Employment

Alongside the unemployment rate, the net change in employment measures the absolute number of jobs created or lost in the Canadian economy. This figure is critical for understanding business confidence and labor market flexib

 

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