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Dollar Steady as Oil Prices Surge
Abstract:The U.S. dollar held its ground ahead of a critical Federal Reserve policy decision as extreme crude oil supply disruptions drove inflation concerns. Rabobank pushed its second-quarter Brent crude target to $107 per barrel following the physical closure of the Strait of Hormuz. Meanwhile, the Australian dollar slipped on softer consumer price data, and the Indian rupee hit new lows amid foreign capital outflows.

The U.S. dollar held its ground against major currencies as crude oil prices spiked on severe Middle East supply disruptions. The foreign exchange market is pricing in fresh inflationary pressures from the oil shock ahead of a crucial Federal Reserve monetary policy decision. The simultaneous increase in energy costs and shifting interest rate expectations leaves currency traders navigating a highly constrained liquidity environment.
Brent Crude Reaches For $107
Rabobank analysts Michael Every, Florence Schmit, and Joe DeLaura raised their oil price targets, citing the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz. They expect Brent crude to average $107 per barrel in the second quarter of 2026, while West Texas Intermediate is projected to average $98. Physical market prices have already detached from paper futures, with Dubai crude trading between $150 and $166 per barrel. Analysts project that shipping will only slowly resume, with oil flows reaching 80% of pre-war capacity by August. The supply shock introduces clear upside risks for global inflation, directly impacting macroeconomic trading.
Dollar Holds Ground Before Fed
The U.S. dollar remained stable across Asian trading sessions as markets waited for the final Federal Reserve meeting under Chair Jerome Powell. The central bank is widely expected to leave interest rates unchanged, forcing traders to focus tightly on the accompanying statement. Geopolitical conflict and the subsequent spike in energy prices have added complexity to the Fed's inflation outlook. Against the Japanese yen, the dollar traded in the upper 159 range, staying near the 160 threshold despite the Bank of Japan holding rates and adopting a hawkish tone earlier in the week.
Australian Dollar Slips on Inflation Data
The Australian dollar dropped 0.25% to trade near $0.717 after the country's March consumer price index fell slightly short of market expectations. Rising fuel costs linked to the Middle East conflict drove headline inflation higher, keeping core price growth above the Reserve Bank of Australias target band of 2% to 3%. Despite the slight miss in the headline data, the persistent inflation profile suggests continued monetary pressure. ANZ analysts expect the Reserve Bank to proceed with another 25 basis point rate hike at its May meeting following a cumulative 50 basis points of increases in 2026.
Indian Rupee Nears 95 Per Dollar
The Indian rupee weakened to 94.55 against the dollar, losing 36 paise to hit a one-month low amidst foreign portfolio investor outflows. The currency pair approached the 95 level as traders weighed the impact of elevated global oil prices on domestic inflation and foreign fund flows. Indian equity markets saw foreign net sales of 21.04 billion rupees in a single session, exacerbating the currency loss. Currency traders remain cautious of potential market intervention by the Reserve Bank of India to stabilize the exchange rate.
What Is Driving It
Geopolitical conflict is the primary force moving across macro asset classes. The effective blockade of the Strait of Hormuz has created a physical supply squeeze in the crude oil market, detaching physical delivery prices from paper futures. This sudden energy price shock feeds directly into global inflation expectations. Consequently, currency traders are adjusting their positions based on the likelihood that central banks, particularly the Federal Reserve and the Reserve Bank of Australia, will need to hold or raise interest rates to combat fuel-driven price increases. At the same time, risk aversion and institutional capital outflows are punishing emerging market currencies.
Why It Matters
The current alignment of surging crude oil and a firm U.S. dollar creates a difficult environment for energy-importing nations and their currencies. Foreign exchange markets are rapidly transitioning from pricing in standard cyclical inflation to preparing for a prolonged, supply-driven energy shock. As physical oil contracts price in major premiums, central banks face narrowing options for monetary easing, establishing a structural support base for the U.S. dollar.


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