Abstract:The U.S. dollar experienced mixed trading as a jump in crude oil prices, triggered by tanker attacks in the Strait of Hormuz, revived inflation concerns and shifted market focus back to the Federal Reserve's monetary policy path.

The U.S. dollar faced mixed trading conditions as jumping crude oil prices revived inflation concerns and shifted market focus toward the Federal Reserve's monetary policy outlook. With fresh supply disruption threats emerging from the Middle East, currency traders and Indian macro investors are closely monitoring how energy costs will influence global central bank rate paths.
The dollar registered minor movements against major peers, driven by the prospect that higher energy costs could keep U.S. monetary policy tighter for longer. The U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) traded near 101.09, while the euro and British pound stood at 1.141 and 1.335 against the U.S. dollar, respectively. On the data front, the U.S. trade deficit widened sharply to $77.60 billion in May from April's $54.60 billion. Private payroll data indicated employers added an average of 21,000 jobs per week over the four weeks ending June 20. Markets currently price a 72.70% probability that the Federal Reserve will hold interest rates steady at its upcoming July meeting, with attention turning to the release of the latest FOMC meeting minutes.
Currency market inflation fears are directly linked to a sudden spike in crude oil following attacks on at least three tankers traveling through the Strait of Hormuz. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude for August delivery jumped $2.01, or 2.93%, reaching $70.56 per barrel. The incidents, which included drone and projectile strikes on tankers near Omani waters, heightened concerns of fresh U.S.-Iran conflicts. This surge in oil prices benefits energy-exporting currencies while placing immediate depreciatory pressure on currencies reliant on oil imports.
In the Asia-Pacific region, the Reserve Bank of New Zealand is expected to tighten monetary conditions, with forecasts pointing to a 25-basis-point hike in the Official Cash Rate from 2.25% to 2.50%. Meanwhile, Japan posted a May current account surplus of 3.968 trillion yen, missing expectations of a 4.121 trillion yen print despite a 14.7% annualized increase in exports to 9.360 trillion yen. Amid this economic backdrop, the greenback traded at 162.10 against the Japanese yen, keeping the focus squarely on the interest rate gap between Washington and Tokyo.
Energy-linked currencies absorbed the oil data differently. The U.S. dollar traded at 1.420 against the Canadian dollar, constrained by a Canadian domestic trade surplus that expanded to C$4.24 billion in May. Canadian exports rose by 0.90% to a record high of $77.10 billion. The Australian dollar also saw moderate support, trading at 0.693 against the U.S. dollar, as commodity-backed assets gained traction amid the broader energy sector rally.
Trading conditions reflect heightened market sensitivity to crude oil supply lines and their direct transmission into global inflation metrics. With rate expectations finely balanced, foreign exchange pricing remains heavily reactive to incoming economic data and central bank policy developments.