The U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) retreated to 100.58 by mid-session Wednesday, slipping 0.40% as investors recalibrated expectations for Federal Reserve policy following a softer-than-expected inflation print and calming trade tensions.
This decline deepens a two-day pullback from resistance at 101.302 and the downtrending 50-day moving average of 101.900. Momentum suggests a potential test of the next technical target near 99.391, the short-term 50% retracement level.
April’s consumer price index (CPI), released on Tuesday, rose just 0.2%, missing the 0.3% consensus forecast, and reinforcing market bets on Fed rate cuts. Annual CPI now stands at 2.3%, down from 2.4% expectations, while core inflation held steady at 2.8%.
The softer inflation profile prompted a broad USD sell-off, with the euro rising 0.33% to $1.1222, sterling up 0.24% to $1.3335, and the dollar down 0.96% against the yen at 146.04.
Rabobank’s Jane Foley noted the dollar is behaving more like a “risky” asset post-April tariff announcements, diverging from its typical safe-haven role.
Despite the CPI miss, U.S. Treasury yields inched up, signaling investor skepticism over how quickly inflation could justify aggressive Fed cuts. The 10-year yield held near 4.505% and the 2-year rose 1.5 basis points to 4.032%.
Analysts at Deutsche Bank suggested tariff-related inflation pressures have yet to materialize, citing a muted impact in April data. They anticipate more pronounced effects in consumer prices by June, especially as recent trade deals and a 90-day tariff reprieve delay inflationary fallout.
News of May 5 talks between South Korea’s Deputy Finance Minister and U.S. Treasury officials added to pressure on the greenback. The Korean won surged over 1% to 1397.35, its strongest in a week. Scotiabank analysts interpreted the meeting as a signal that U.S. officials may favor a weaker dollar stance—an impression reinforced by broad Asian currency gains.
With traders pricing in 53 basis points of Fed easing through year-end—likely starting in September—the dollar index looks vulnerable to deeper downside. Thursday’s U.S. retail sales, PPI data, and a speech from Fed Chair Powell will be crucial for near-term direction. Failure to reclaim the 101.30 level could open the door to further retracement toward 99.40 support.
More Information in our Economic Calendar.
Mr.Hyerczyk is a technical analyst, market researcher, educator and trader. Jim is an expert in the area of patterns, price and time analysis, Forex and stocks.