Risk warning: Our products are leveraged and carry a high level of risk, which can result in the loss of your entire capital. Such products may not be suitable for all investors. It is crucial to understand the risks involved fully.
  • Support
  • For Institutionals
Risk warning: Our products are leveraged and carry a high level of risk, which can result in the loss of your entire capital. Such products may not be suitable for all investors. It is crucial to understand the risks involved fully.
  • Support
  • For Institutionals

Current region:

  • العربية
    ACTIVE
Other languages:
  • Español – Spanish
  • Português – Portuguese
  • English – International
  • 日本語 – Japanese
Risk warning: Our products are leveraged and carry a high level of risk, which can result in the loss of your entire capital. Such products may not be suitable for all investors. It is crucial to understand the risks involved fully.
Risk Warning: Leveraged products carry a high level of risk and may result in the loss of all your capital. Ensure you fully understand the risks before investing.
Risk Warning: Leveraged products carry a high level of risk and may result in the loss of all your capital. Ensure you fully understand the risks before investing.

Current region:

  • العربية
    ACTIVE
Other languages:
  • Español – Spanish
  • Português – Portuguese
  • English – International
  • 日本語 – Japanese
Risk Warning: Leveraged products carry a high level of risk and may result in the loss of all your capital. Ensure you fully understand the risks before investing.

Dollar Recovers After the Fall, Euro Declines Following Weekend Gains

The U.S. dollar edged higher on Monday, recovering from a four-month low, though it remained under pressure amid concerns that the Trump administration’s trade policies could weigh on economic activity in the world’s largest economy.

As of 04:10 ET (09:10 GMT), the Dollar Index, which measures the greenback against a basket of six major currencies, rose 0.1% to 103.959, slightly above last week’s four-month low.

Dollar Stabilizes After Recent Decline

The U.S. dollar managed to halt its recent slide, gaining some ground after a month-long decline driven by uncertainty surrounding President Donald Trump’s trade policies and their potential economic impact.

In an interview with Fox News on Sunday, Trump refrained from predicting whether the U.S. economy could enter a recession following his tariff measures on Mexico, Canada, and China.

Last week, the dollar suffered a sharp 3% drop against major rivals, marking its weakest weekly performance since November 2022.

Market focus now shifts to Wednesday’s February Consumer Price Index (CPI) report, which could provide insight into the Federal Reserve’s future monetary policy stance.

“The core rate is expected to remain sticky at 0.3% month-on-month,” analysts at ING noted, reinforcing Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s recent comments that the central bank is in no rush to cut interest rates.

Euro Pulls Back After Strong Rally

In Europe, EUR/USD dipped 0.2% to 1.0816, retracing slightly after posting its strongest weekly performance since 2009, fueled by Germany’s fiscal policy shifts.

Germany’s election winner, Friedrich Merz’s conservatives, and the Social Democrats concluded initial coalition talks on Saturday, aiming to finalize an agreement before next week. Their central theme is relaxing Germany’s borrowing limits to sustain economic growth.

On Tuesday, investors will closely monitor a high-level meeting in Saudi Arabia, where U.S. and Ukrainian officials will continue negotiations on Ukraine-Russia peace efforts.

“We anticipate EUR/USD consolidating within the 1.0770–1.0850 range at the start of the week,” ING analysts added. “A further leg higher will likely require hawkish signals from ECB officials or meaningful progress in Saudi Arabia, rather than U.S. macroeconomic developments.”

Meanwhile, GBP/USD declined 0.3% to 1.2880, giving up some recent gains after sterling touched a four-month high of 1.2946 earlier in the session.

Yen Strengthens on Safe-Haven Demand

In Asia, USD/JPY fell 0.6% to 147.17, nearing its lowest level since early October.

The yen strengthened due to increased safe-haven demand, reflecting fragile global economic prospects. Additionally, speculation remains that the Bank of Japan may continue hiking interest rates, despite January’s wage data falling slightly below market expectations.

Conversely, the Chinese yuan weakened, with USD/CNY climbing 0.4% to 7.2655, following disappointing inflation data.

Consumer and producer inflation fell short of expectations in China in February, suggesting lingering but not accelerating deflationary pressures, despite Beijing’s stimulus efforts. Measures, including subsidies on discretionary goods, aim to boost domestic consumption, yet market concerns persist. 

Related posts

Untitled design

USDJPY Rises Despite Strong Japan GDP

The Japanese yen remains under pressure even after Japan posted stronger-than-expected economic growth, allowing USDJPY to extend its rally for

Technical Analysis-EN

WTI-Brent Spread Compresses

Yesterday marked a highly volatile session for oil futures, with prices swinging sharply throughout the day before closing near their

19-May-onequity-850x550

Market Commentary 2026-05-19

Daily market commentary featuring timely analysis of price action and economic events. Stay informed with expert observations on the themes