The aussie was the big beneficiary on Friday as the U.S. dollar came under pressure from rallying risk markets, with gold, silver, and equity futures advancing while USD/CNH fell. In data, U.S. consumer sentiment edged higher and beat expectations, while one-year inflation expectations fell sharply from 4.0% to 3.5%, easing concerns about persistent price pressures.
Key U.S. data next week—including December retail sales, January payrolls, CPI, and weekly claims—pose volatility risks. Fed Vice Chair Philip Jefferson expressed cautious optimism about 2026, while San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly characterized the economy as "precarious." Treasury Secretary Bessent said a strong-dollar policy means building conditions that underpin dollar strength.
EUR/USD opened New York trading near 1.1790 after touching 1.1766 overnight, then extended its advance to reach 1.1826 before settling near 1.1820. Bulls found technical support from the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement of the 1.1572-1.2084 range and the 21-day moving average. ECB policymakers said current policy fits the inflation outlook but warned they must be ready to act if price growth weakens excessively. Separately, ECB officials cautioned that a sharp euro rise could prompt a policy response, noting the currency's strength mainly reflects dollar weakness rather than eurozone fundamentals.
GBP/USD held firm through the New York afternoon, trading up 0.7% at 1.3610 within a Friday range of 1.3509-1.3624. The broad risk rebound lifted sterling, considerably paring Thursday's post-Bank of England slide. Bank of England Chief Economist Huw Pill warned against excessive comfort from an expected April inflation dip, stressing the need to prevent undershooting the target, while British house prices posted the best monthly gain since 2024 in January. The political fallout from UK PM Keir Starmer appointing Peter Mandelson as ambassador to Washington remains a downside risk.
USD/JPY settled above the cloud top and 21-DMA ahead of weekend Japanese elections, trading in a narrow 156.52-157.14 range below the key 158 level. The LDP is expected to secure a solid lower house majority. AUD/USD surged 1.44% to 0.7025, benefiting from precious metals gains and easing geopolitical tensions after Iran's top diplomat said Oman-mediated nuclear talks with the U.S. were off to a good start. USD/CAD fell 0.47% after Canada unexpectedly shed 24,800 jobs, though its unemployment rate fell to 6.5%. Treasury yields were mixed, sending the 2s-10s curve down about 1 basis point to +71.2bp as it pulled back from a four-year high.
The S&P 500 rose 1.74%. WTI oil was up 1.1% as investors assessed U.S.-Iran talks.
Gold rose 4%, silver popped 8% and copper gained 1.1%. Heading toward the close: EUR/USD +0.39%, USD/JPY +0.03%, GBP/USD +0.66%, AUD/USD +1.37%, DXY -0.23%, EUR/JPY +0.39%, GBP/JPY +0.67%, AUD/JPY +1.39%.(Editing by Burton Frierson Reporting by Robert Fullem)









