Abstract:The US Dollar retreated on Wednesday, shedding 0.18% to settle near 98.90, as risk appetite returned to global markets despite lingering geopolitical tensions and robust US economic data. The New Zealand Dollar led the G10 leaderboard, surging 0.73%, while the Mexican Peso recovered ground as traders looked past the latest solid US jobs and PMI figures.

The US Dollar (USD) faced selling pressure on Wednesday, decoupling from typically supportive fundamental drivers to close lower against a basket of major peers. The US Dollar Index (DXY) eased approximately 0.18% to settle near 98.90, retreating from a five-week high of 99.68 touched in the previous session.
In a counter-intuitive session, global investors appeared to shrug off the “safe-haven” bid usually associated with geopolitical instability. Despite reports of an ongoing conflict between the US and Iran weighing on broader sentiment, currency markets shifted into a “Risk On” mode.
This shift occurred even as the US economy produced strong hard data. The Greenback failed to capitalize on positive employment figures and a robust ISM Services PMI, suggesting that market positioning or concerns over the fiscal implications of the conflict may be overshadowing immediate growth metrics.
The shift in sentiment was most visible in the high-beta currency block:
Market analysts noted that resilience in China's economic data likely provided a tailwind for commodity-linked currencies like the Kiwi. Standard Chartered analysts highlighted that despite soft official PMIs, China'sJanuary-February hard data underscores underlying economic resilience, further fueling the risk-positive tone.