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اردو
Dollar Steadies As US Inflation Reaches 4.20%
Abstract:The U.S. dollar remained steady as May inflation hit 4.20%, limiting expectations for short-term Federal Reserve rate cuts. Meanwhile, WTI crude oil surged past $90 on Middle East supply disruptions, and the Bank of Canada held rates at 2.25%. A look at current macroeconomic conditions for forex and CFD traders.

The U.S. dollar traded largely flat across major pairs as consumer inflation rose to a three-year high in May, complicating the outlook for Federal Reserve interest rate cuts. For Indian market participants, the combination of sticky U.S. consumer prices and rising crude oil costs from Middle East supply disruptions reinforces a high-interest-rate environment that typically limits emerging market liquidity.
US CPI Data Tempers Fed Easing Hopes
The U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) ended nearly unchanged, adding 0.03% to settle at 100.04, following the release of May inflation figures. The U.S. Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose 0.50% month-over-month and accelerated to 4.20% on an annual basis, the highest level in three years. Core inflation, which strips out food and energy costs, matched expectations at 2.90% year-over-year.
Energy prices contributed heavily to the headline figure, rising 3.90% in May, with gasoline surging 40.50% annually. The Federal Reserve, meeting under Chair Kevin Warsh, faces an environment where benchmark inflation above 4.00% creates rigid barriers for the central bank to implement short-term rate cuts.
Major Currency Pairs and Bank of Canada Hold
In global currency markets, the greenback saw marginal movements against its peers. The euro traded at 1.154, up 0.03%, while the British pound traded at 1.337, up 0.06%. The Japanese yen was marked at 160.539 against the dollar, moving lower by 0.12%, and the Swiss franc shifted 0.22% to 0.799. The Australian dollar gained 0.40% to 0.699.
Meanwhile, the Canadian dollar traded at 1.394 against the U.S. dollar after the Bank of Canada kept its benchmark overnight rate steady at 2.25%, matching economist consensus. The Canadian Bank Rate remained at 2.50% and the deposit rate unchanged at 2.20%.
Crude Oil Surges on Strait of Hormuz Closure
Commodities and equities experienced sharp moves as military actions in the Middle East impacted risk sentiment and global supply channels. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude for July delivery surged 2.60% to $92.63 per barrel.
The price action follows a series of military strikes between the U.S. and Iran that resulted in the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, forcing markets to unwind expectations for an early peace deal. As energy prices spiked, spot gold prices tumbled, and major equity indices in the U.S., Japan's Nikkei 225, and South Korea's KOSPI posted significant losses.
CySEC Withdraws TTCM Broker License
In retail regulatory developments, the Cyprus Securities and Exchange Commission (CySEC) officially withdrew the Cyprus Investment Firm authorization for TTCM Traders Trust Capital Markets Ltd. The firm, operating under CySEC license 107/09 since 2009, expressly renounced its status, prompting a voluntary exit from the Cypriot regulatory regime. While the globally facing Traders Trust brand continues to offer forex and CFD services via offshore structures, the CySEC decision removes its registered European Union operational footprint.
Macro trading conditions currently reflect a structural tension between energy-driven inflation and restrictive central bank policy. Persistent U.S. price pressures and heightened geopolitical supply risks keep the dollar supported on yield differentials, while leaving rate-sensitive assets under clear fundamental constraints.
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