The dollar climbed alongside crude on Wednesday as tensions over
the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran and risks to Strait of Hormuz
shipping eclipsed the IEA’s announcement of a record 400
million-barrel oil release.
Iran warned oil could surge to $200 a barrel as its forces
attacked merchant shipping in the Gulf and reportedly laid mines
in the Strait of Hormuz.
A senior Iranian military spokesman warned that any threat to
Iran’s ports would make all regional ports legitimate targets,
while Iran’s president said ending the war requires recognition
of Iran’s sovereign rights and reparations.
Israeli officials privately admitted there is no guarantee the
war with Iran will topple its clerical leadership, also
believing Washington is not close to ordering a halt.
U.S. President Donald Trump said there's "practically nothing
left" to target in Iran and that the war there will end "soon."
He also backed the decision to release oil reserves.
Later in the session, U.S. officials warned of possible
Iranian-linked attacks on energy infrastructure in Iraq and
potential drone threats to the U.S. West Coast.
U.S. 2-year yields hit their highest since September as oil
prices rose, with February CPI matching forecasts at 2.4% and
core inflation steady at 2.5%.
The dollar index is holding support at its 10-day moving
average, but fresh positioning remains limited amid Middle East
uncertainty ahead of next week’s policy meetings.
EUR/USD hit a two-session low near 1.1561 amid higher U.S.
yields and a stronger dollar, with an inverted hammer
reinforcing bearish signals below its 200-DMA at 1.1676. ECB
officials warned that surging oil prices threaten inflation and
said they would act quickly if price pressures start to stick.
GBP/USD stayed range-bound as traders avoid exposure, with
the pound propped up by EUR/GBP’s drop to five-week lows as oil
rises.
Inflation pressures could shift the debate from when the Bank of
England cuts to whether it cuts at all. British finance minister
Rachel Reeves said she would consider action to shield
households from surging energy costs.
USD/JPY extended its weekly advance as oil, the dollar, and
Treasury yields rose, with crude holding gains despite a
coordinated reserve release. The pair eyes its 159.45 YTD peak
on further gains though intervention risks and option gamma
helps slow its ascent.
AUD/USD retreated from a multi-year high near 0.7188 as
firmer U.S. yields and a stronger dollar pulled the pair back
toward its upper Bollinger band, despite bullish RSI and
moving-average signals.
Treasury yields were up 6-8 basis points as the curve steepened.
The 2s-10s curve was up about 1 basis point to +57.0bp.
The S&P 500 fell 0.31%.
WTI oil rose 4.7% on supply fears despite the record reserves
release announcement.
Gold fell 0.28% while copper dropped 1.3%.
Heading toward the close: EUR/USD -0.35%, USD/JPY +0.55%,
GBP/USD -0.01%, AUD/USD +0.41%, DXY +0.42%, EUR/JPY +0.21%,
GBP/JPY +0.51%, AUD/JPY +0.97%.(Editing by Burton Frierson
Reporting by Robert Fullem)