Abstract:As the trading session begins on Monday, the US dollar is showing no significant movement. The currency gained momentum on Friday when US producer prices were reported higher than anticipated. Although the discrepancy was not sizeable, it continued the previous trend of producer price readings exceeding expectations, which was also observed during the minor Consumer Price Index increase disclosed on Thursday.
As the trading session begins on Monday, the US dollar is showing no significant movement. The currency gained momentum on Friday when US producer prices were reported higher than anticipated. Although the discrepancy was not sizeable, it continued the previous trend of producer price readings exceeding expectations, which was also observed during the minor Consumer Price Index increase disclosed on Thursday.
Given these factors, it is unlikely that many will completely disregard the potential for another Federal Reserve interest rate hike before the year's end, a situation that could benefit the dollar in the short to intermediate term. Anxiety over the global economy's growth potential is providing additional support to the greenback. Particularly, worries about China's economic status are driving this trend, ultimately benefiting the dollar viewed as a safe haven.
Despite frequent “de-dollarization” headlines, the U.S. dollar remains unrivaled due to unmatched market depth, global usability, and trusted legal/institutional frameworks. Crypto and other currencies (euro, yuan) lack the stability, convertibility, and infrastructure required to replace the USD, while the Fed’s credibility and the scale of U.S. financial markets continue to anchor demand. Bottom line: no alternative currently offers a complete, credible substitute for the dollar’s global role.
The U.S. will impose an additional 100% tariff on Chinese imports starting Nov. 1, 2025—potentially earlier—alongside new export controls on “critical software,” escalating tensions after Beijing’s rare-earth curbs, new port fees, a Qualcomm probe, and a halt to U.S. soybean purchases. Stocks fell on the news. Key context: some U.S.-China tariffs remain paused until Nov. 10, a Supreme Court case could reshape Trump’s tariff authority, new U.S. duties on cabinets (Oct. 1) and wood products (Oct. 14) are in force, and a pause on Mexico tariffs is set to end next month.
The Non-farm Payroll (NFP) report may be for the US. However, the report, which is issued every month, impacts the forex market globally. The monthly report estimates the number of jobs gained in the US in the previous month. The job numbers stated on this report exclude those of farms, private households, and non-profit organizations. Usually released on the first Friday of the month, the report also includes the US unemployment rate, average hourly earnings, and participation rate. In this article, we have answered the question - what is NFP in forex - and shared other pertinent details. Read on!
Federal Reserve officials had a meeting on June 17-18 during which some of them expressed a fall in interest rates in July. However, a lot of policymakers are still worried about the inflationary pressures that might emerge from US President Donald Trump’s import tariff decisions aimed at changing global trade. So, it seems the rate cut may not happen in July. Read this to know more.