The dollar fell alongside Treasury yields on Monday as equities
weakened after U.S. President Donald Trump signaled the
possibility of new restrictive trade measures following Friday’s
Supreme Court tariff ruling.
Trump warned countries against backing away from recently
negotiated trade deals, saying that he would hit them with
higher duties under different laws and may impose license fees.
His comments come as the EU considers freezing the ratification
process of its trade deal with the U.S.
Yields fell even as the Chicago and Dallas Fed surveys
showed improving business activity. February consumer confidence
and a slate of Fed speakers are on Tuesday’s agenda.
The State Department is withdrawing non-essential staff and
families from the U.S. embassy in Beirut before Iran and the
U.S. nuclear talks on Thursday.
Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller said that if the
U.S. is moving to a higher-productivity, higher-growth economy
it could imply that interest rates would also be higher.
EUR/USD held a modest gain above its 1.1775 session low, but
the pair remains technically bearish while trading below the
21-day moving average, with an inverted daily hammer forming
just above the nearby 55-day moving average at 1.1767.
GBP/USD rose modestly with early European strength fading amid
Trump’s tariff rhetoric and rising geopolitical angst. Softer
gilt yields and lingering UK political, inflation and growth
concerns helped cap sterling's advance. Bank of England Governor
Andrew Bailey and three other policymakers including Chief
Economist Huw Pill are set to address lawmakers on Tuesday.
AUD/USD slipped as haven demand and weakness in shares
lifted U.S. Treasuries and the dollar. An inverted daily hammer
and diverging RSIs poses risks for AUD/USD bulls.
USD/JPY fell beneath its 21-day moving average after being
capped near its 100-day moving average of 155.01, with the yen
posting broad gains on worsening risk sentiment.
Treasury yields fell 4 to 7 basis points with the 2s-10s
curve slipping 2 basis points to +58.1bp, its flattest reading
since early December.
The S&P 500 fell 1.0% on weakness in financials and consumer
shares.
WTI oil eased from a six-month high with nuclear talks and U.S.
tariffs in focus.
Gold rose 2.0% and silver gained 3% while copper fell
1.0%.
Heading toward the close: EUR/USD +0.15%, USD/JPY -0.35%,
GBP/USD +0.15%, AUD/USD -0.5%, DXY -0.15%, EUR/JPY -0.24%,
GBP/JPY -0.28%, AUD/JPY -0.72%.(Editing by Burton Frierson
Reporting by Robert Fullem)