The U.S. dollar hovered near unchanged levels on Friday as traders weighed the Federal Reserve’s firmer tone against softer U.S. indicators and a sharper-than-expected drop in China’s exports. With risk appetite fragile and key economic releases delayed, the currency market stayed range-bound into the weekend.
Key Points
The U.S. dollar had started a five-day advance after the Fed signaled caution around further easing, only to give back ground on Thursday when labor readings came in soft. That swing left the greenback on course for a roughly flat week, even as equity markets—especially tech-heavy benchmarks—headed for their biggest weekly declines in months.
In the absence of official data during the extended government shutdown, investors leaned on private-sector jobs surveys that showed job losses in October concentrated in government and retail. Firms also cited cost-cutting and the adoption of artificial intelligence as drivers of layoffs—developments that complicated the near-term outlook for the U.S. dollar.
Fed Outlook Keeps U.S. Dollar Bulls in Check
Policymakers’ latest messaging has framed December’s decision as highly dependent on the labor picture, leaving markets hypersensitive to any hiring or wage clues. Jefferies economist Mohit Kumar described the setup as a coin toss in the near term and argued that thin data flow has amplified market swings around labor headlines. He added that Chair Jerome Powell’s remarks imply a high bar for a cut at the next meeting, a stance that typically supports the U.S. dollar but doesn’t guarantee follow-through without stronger growth signs.
U.S. Treasury yields steadied on Friday after sliding the prior session amid uncertainty tied to the shutdown and legal questions around tariff policy. For the U.S. dollar, that combination—hawkish-leaning Fed rhetoric and wobbling macro signals—has limited momentum and kept price action confined to the well-worn range seen since August.
China’s Export Slide Reframes Global Risk
China’s October exports contracted by the most since February, surprising markets after months in which companies front-loaded U.S.-bound shipments ahead of tariffs. The setback underscored how fragile global trade flows remain and rekindled debate about spillovers to Europe’s manufacturing base.
For the euro zone, a weaker external demand pulse could pressure growth just as the European Central Bank is expected to keep policy rates steady. That policy divergence—steady in the euro area versus anticipated U.S. and UK cuts further out in 2026—helped the euro edge higher against the U.S. dollar in Friday dealings. At the same time, risk aversion tied to China can, at times, buoy the U.S. dollar as investors seek liquid safe havens.
Yields, Safe Havens and the Yen
A bid for safety earlier in the week briefly lifted the U.S. dollar, but the Japanese yen remained the market’s preferred hedge. Analysts pointed out that the Bank of Japan is likely to move gradually, and if it skips a January step, another hike may not arrive until the new fiscal year—leaving short-term rates around 0.5% even as inflation runs higher by historical standards. That slow path supports carry trades and keeps yen strength episodic rather than sustained.
Stock market losses—driven by tech shares—added another layer to the risk-off backdrop. Even so, with Treasury yields pausing and Fed expectations contained, the U.S. dollar’s haven bid faded into the end of the week.
Where Major Pairs Stand Now
- The U.S. dollar index hovered near 99.67, on track for about a 0.05% weekly decline. Despite midweek volatility, it remains locked in the same trading corridor it has occupied since late summer.
- The euro advanced roughly 0.1% to about $1.1559, outperforming sterling and the Swiss franc as traders leaned into the view of steady ECB policy near term.
- Against the yen, the U.S. dollar traded around 153.14 after briefly touching 152.82 earlier in the session, its lowest level since late October. Rate differentials and BOJ caution continue to anchor the pair near multi-decade highs.
These levels reflect a crosscurrent: a steadier policy path in Europe, a cautious but not dovish Fed, and a patient BOJ. Together, they reinforce a range-bound pattern for the U.S. dollar until clearer catalysts arrive.
What Traders Are Watching Next
With the monthly nonfarm payrolls report postponed by the shutdown, markets have pivoted to private payroll trackers, weekly jobless claims, and company-level announcements to infer labor momentum. Barclays earlier this week assigned a 60% chance that the shutdown ends between November 11 and 21, and a 15% probability of an extension into December—timelines that could shape when official data resumes.
Heading into December, the U.S. dollar path will hinge on:
- Labor indicators: wage growth, hours worked, and revisions once official data resumes.
- Fed communications: how officials characterize the “bar” for a cut at the December FOMC meeting.
- China’s data pulse: whether export weakness persists and how it filters into Europe.
- Risk sentiment: tech-led equity moves and their influence on safe-haven demand.
Bottom Line
For now, the U.S. dollar is steady rather than strong. A firmer Fed stance lends support, but softer U.S. readings, an ongoing shutdown, and global trade headwinds are capping rallies. Unless incoming labor data breaks the stalemate—or a fresh growth shock tilts risk appetite—the U.S. dollar looks set to extend its late-summer trading range into year-end.
FAQ’s
Why is the U.S. dollar flat this week?
The U.S. dollar is balancing a hawkish Fed tone with softer labor data and steady Treasury yields. That tug-of-war has kept the dollar index stuck in a tight range.
How do Fed rate expectations impact the U.S. dollar?
Expectations for higher-for-longer rates typically support the U.S. dollar, while rising odds of cuts weigh on it. With December data-dependent, traders are reacting to every labor signal.
What does weak China export data mean for the U.S. dollar and euro?
A sharper export drop flags slower global demand, pressuring Europe’s manufacturing outlook. Risk aversion can lift the U.S. dollar, though a steady ECB stance has helped the euro hold up.
Why is the Japanese yen viewed as a safe-haven right now?
The yen’s haven status stems from Japan’s net creditor position and deep markets, attracting flows during stress. BOJ’s gradual tightening tempers lasting yen strength but doesn’t erase its defensive appeal.
Article Source: Reuters

