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اردو
Dollar Surges as Crude Oil Plummets
Abstract:The U.S. dollar index rallies alongside rising Treasury yields, pushing gold below historical benchmarks. Meanwhile, a U.S.-Iran peace agreement triggers a sharp drop in crude oil prices.

The U.S. dollar is steering toward its sharpest monthly gain in almost a year as higher Treasury yields draw capital away from precious metals. Concurrently, crude oil prices dropped sharply following a U.S.-Iran peace agreement that reopened shipping lanes through the Strait of Hormuz. The divergent moves highlight a broad market rotation driven by shifting inflation expectations and central bank policy pricing.
Crude Oil Sinks on Hormuz Reopening
Crude oil prices plummeted in Asian trading on Thursday following the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude for August delivery fell $2.87, or 3.92 percent, to trade at $70.34 per barrel. Brent crude futures extended their decline for a fourth consecutive session, dropping nearly 2 percent to trade below $73 a barrel. The price drops reflect resuming tanker traffic through the Gulf after the execution of a U.S.-Iran peace agreement, easing regional tensions and immediate supply constraints.
Dollar Index Gains on Yield Support
The U.S. dollar index is tracking toward its sharpest monthly gain in almost a year. Higher U.S. Treasury yields and interest rate expectations are pulling capital into the greenback, with markets actively pricing in a Federal Reserve rate hike by December. Against the Japanese yen, the U.S. dollar remains elevated, trading in the higher 161 yen range.
Gold Drops Below $4,000 Mark
Gold prices extended recent downward moves to trade below $3,970 an ounce. This marks the first time in 2026 the metal has fallen below the $4,000 threshold overnight, hovering near its lowest level since November. The sharp drop highlights a direct reaction to the stronger U.S. dollar and rising Treasury yields, which typically act as a headwind for non-yielding metals in macro trading flows.
Australian Dollar Absorbs Strong Jobs
The Australian dollar is trading near $0.689, balancing broad U.S. dollar strength against tighter domestic labor data. Australian employment data showed an increase of 40,300 jobs in May, bringing the total to 14.74 million and reversing a decline from the previous month. The national unemployment rate ticked down to 4.4 percent from a four-year high of 4.5 percent in April. Supporting the currency, household spending also rebounded by 1.3 percent over the month.
Rupee Edges Higher on Trade Optimism
The Indian rupee settled 11 paise higher at 94.65 against the U.S. dollar. The local currency found support from growing market optimism regarding a potential U.S.-India bilateral trade agreement. Lower global crude oil prices also provided a structural advantage by reducing imported inflation pressures for India. The currency appreciation materialized despite comments from Reserve Bank of India Governor Sanjay Malhotra, who noted that discussions regarding domestic interest rate hikes were premature.
What Is Driving It
Institutional capital is shifting rapidly away from energy and precious metals as geopolitical tensions in the Middle East ease. The reopening of the Strait of Hormuz removes a major supply bottleneck, lowering crude oil prices. Concurrently, high U.S. Treasury yields and expectations of further Federal Reserve action are drawing capital into the U.S. dollar, strengthening it against a broad basket of foreign currencies and commodities.
Why It Matters
The concurrent drop in energy prices and rise in the U.S. dollar creates a complex environment for global central banks. Cheaper oil mechanically lowers headline inflation pressures for net energy importers. However, a dominant U.S. dollar exports inflation via exchange rates, forcing regional policymakers to balance trade competitiveness against currency depreciation in their domestic markets.


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