Abstract:The U.S. dollar retreated from 13-month highs following softer-than-expected June payroll data, shifting broader Asian currency pairs higher. Despite the dollar's pullback, the Indian rupee fell to 95.35 on local importer demand. The Japanese yen steadied near 161.16 on intervention watch, while gold and crude oil posted notable gains amid adjusted Fed rate expectations and Middle East shipping updates.

Broad Asian currencies advanced after the U.S. dollar pulled back from near 13-month highs following softer-than-expected payroll data. Despite the broader dollar weakness, the Indian rupee came under pressure due to domestic outflows, presenting a mixed trading environment across regional currency pairs.
The Indian rupee reversed its recent trajectory to settle 19 paise lower at 95.35 against the U.S. dollar. Strong dollar demand from importers and corporate hedgers, combined with foreign fund outflows, drove the domestic currency weakness. This local pressure on the rupee outweighed any potential market support from recent declines in international crude oil prices.
The U.S. dollar index stalled in Asian trade, reversing course from a 13-month high reached earlier in the week. The drop was triggered by a sluggish U.S. jobs report, which showed the economy added only 57,000 roles in June, well below the 114,000 expected and down from the downwardly revised 129,000 in May. The unemployment rate ticked down to 4.2 percent as labor force participation dropped. The data led markets to trim bets on a Federal Reserve rate hike later this year, dragging down the dollar. However, hawkish signals from the Fed, including a commitment to a 2 percent inflation target, continued to provide a floor for the currency.
The Japanese yen remained in focus, hovering around the 161.16 level against the dollar after a sharp overnight recovery from 40-year lows. Japanese authorities have reportedly shifted to a more targeted campaign to squeeze speculators rather than telegraphing broader interventions. Structural headwinds remain for the yen, constrained by high energy prices and a severe interest rate gap with the United States. Elsewhere, the Australian dollar rose to $0.694, while the Chinese yuan's pair fell 0.1 percent.
In commodity markets tied to macroeconomic sentiment, gold surged more than 1 percent to trade at $4,180 an ounce as easing rate expectations shifted capital flows. Energy prices saw modest gains, with Brent crude futures rising above $72 a barrel and West Texas Intermediate up to $68.63. Markets monitored contradictory remarks from the U.S. and Iran regarding the management of the Strait of Hormuz, though signs of progress in regional peace talks supported expectations of stabilizing shipping activity.
Shifting U.S. employment data and adjusted interest rate expectations currently drive volatility across the dollar, precious metals, and Asian currency pairs. Currency markets face a mixed environment as market participants weigh localized trading pressures—such as sustained structural dollar demand in India and targeted intervention threats in Japan—against changing global liquidity conditions.