Strong US Economic News Boosts the Dollar


The dollar index (DXY00) rallied to a 3.5-week high on Thursday and finished up by +0.19%.  Stronger-than-expected US economic news on Thursday boosted the dollar, as weekly jobless claims fell to a 5-week low, and the Feb Philadelphia business outlook survey unexpectedly rose to a 5-month high.  The dollar also has some positive carryover from Wednesday, when the hawkish minutes of the Jan 27-28 FOMC meeting stated that “several” officials suggested the Fed may need to raise interest rates if inflation stays above its goal. In addition, hawkish comments from Fed Governor Stephen Miran boosted the dollar when he said he now sees a “less accommodative” interest rate path for the US.

Limiting gains in the dollar on Thursday was the widening of the US Dec trade deficit to a 5-month high and the unexpected decline in Jan pending home sales.

US weekly initial unemployment claims fell -23,000 to a 5-week low of 206,000, showing a stronger labor market than expectations of 225,000.

The US Feb Philadelphia business outlook survey unexpectedly rose +3.7 to a 5-month high of 16.3, stronger than expectations of a decline to 7.5.

The US Dec trade deficit was -$70.3 billion, wider than expectations of -$55.5 billion and the biggest deficit in 5 months.

US Jan pending home sales unexpectedly fell -0.8% m/m, weaker than expectations of a +2.0% m/m increase.

Fed Governor Stephen Miran said he now sees a “less accommodative” interest rate path as US employment has held up better than anticipated and goods inflation has been more stubborn.

Swaps markets are discounting the odds at 6% for a -25 bp rate cut at the next policy meeting on March 17-18.

The dollar continues to see underlying weakness as the FOMC is expected to cut interest rates by about -50 bp in 2026, while the BOJ is expected to raise rates by another +25 bp in 2026, and the ECB is expected to leave rates unchanged in 2026.

EUR/USD (^EURUSD) dropped to a 3.5-week low on Thursday and finished down by -0.16%.  The dollar’s strength on Thursday undercut the euro.  Also, Thursday’s weaker-than-expected Eurozone Feb consumer confidence was bearish for the euro.  The euro also has some negative carryover from Wednesday, when the Financial Times reported that ECB President Christine Lagarde will step down from the central bank before her term expires in October 2027.



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