#DollarIndexBreaksBelow99


The sudden shifts in the market on May 25 paint a vivid picture of how quickly geopolitical news can flip the script on global assets. The macro picture reveals why these specific dominoes are falling, along with a look at what to watch for the rest of the week:

The Geopolitical Shift: Why Risk Appetite Returned

The headline driving the market is the active progress toward a U.S.-Iran peace deal, with reports indicating both sides are closing in on a memorandum of understanding to end the conflict.

The Safe-Haven Drain: When geopolitical tensions flare, capital floods into the U.S. dollar as a secure refuge. The prospect of de-escalation has rapidly unwound those safety plays, shifting investor focus back to growth and riskier assets.

The Strait of Hormuz Timeline: The Nikkei reported that a tentative plan involves reopening the critical shipping strait roughly 30 days after a final deal is signed, giving Iran time to clear naval mines. Because this multi-week buffer means energy supply won't normalize overnight, markets remain highly sensitive to concrete updates from Washington and Tehran.

The Market Ripples

Crude Oil Plunges: Global energy supply anxieties had previously pushed oil prices to cycle highs. The peace breakthrough caused Brent and WTI crude to drop over 4%, as the "geopolitical risk premium" was abruptly priced out of the market.

Yen Strengthens to 158.90: The Japanese Yen caught a significant bid. While the yen has faced long-term structural pressure, the combination of crashing oil prices (which benefits major energy importers like Japan) and short-covering triggered a sharp recovery.

The Road Ahead: Thursday's PCE Report

While peace talks dominate the short-term narrative, institutional views (like those from Brown Brothers Harriman) suggest the dollar's structural story isn't dead yet. The market's focus will pivot heavily to Thursday’s U.S. Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) report.

Inflationary pressures were already building in the U.S. economy before the conflict. If the core PCE data comes in hot, it will signal that the Federal Reserve may need to maintain a restrictive, high-rate stance for longer to combat sticky inflation. A data beat on Thursday could easily trigger a sharp technical reversal, giving the dollar index the fundamental backing it needs to reclaim its losses and push back up.

When Thursday's data lands, the market will largely look past the headline numbers. Because the recent drop in crude oil prices happened after this reporting period, the headline PCE will still reflect the massive energy spike from earlier in the spring.

Instead, institutional traders are laser-focused on Core PCE (which strips out food and energy) to see if underlying inflation is truly sticky. The Federal Reserve's target is 2.0%, but recent data has been running significantly hotter.

The Baseline Consensus (What's Expected)

Heading into the Thursday, May 28 release, consensus expectations have crystallized around the following numbers:

Core PCE Month-over-Month (MoM): Expected at 0.3% (matching the previous month's 0.29%).

Core PCE Year-over-Year (YoY): Expected to hold steady or edge slightly upward around 3.2% to 3.3%.

What a "Market-Moving Beat" Looks Like

Because the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) has held the federal funds rate in the elevated 3.50%–3.75% range all year, the threshold for a market-shocking "beat" is high.

Core MoM 0.3% ≥ 0.4% Dollar Rebound: Instant short-covering on the Dollar Index. It would likely reclaim 99.50+ and threaten 100 as traders price out any remaining hopes of rate cuts this year.

Core YoY3.2% ≥ 3.4% Yield Spike: Reaccelerating year-over-year core inflation would force the bond market to seriously price in the risk of additional Fed rate hikes, driving Treasury yields up.

The Nowcast Warning: The Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland's inflation nowcasting model is tracking even hotter than the general consensus, pointing toward a potential 0.36% Core MoM and 3.36% Core YoY. If the official numbers land in that territory, it counts as a firm beat.

Why a Beat Overrides the Peace Deal

Right now, the dollar is down purely on sentiment—funds are moving out of "safety" because the geopolitical risk premium from the Middle East is fading.

However, if Core PCE prints at 0.4% MoM or higher, the narrative shifts from sentiment to hard math. A hot print means the U.S. economy is still wrestling with intense domestic demand, AI-driven infrastructure spending, and sticky services inflation. The Fed will have no choice but to keep interest rates higher for longer than Europe or Japan, restoring the U.S. dollar's massive yield advantage and abruptly halting its recent slide.
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