The dollar rose broadly on Thursday, supported by another jump in oil prices and renewed haven demand as equities slumped. Oil rose more than 6% on supply concerns as the Iran conflict widens with Turkey condemning the Iranian drone attacks in Azerbaijan's Nakhchivan exclave. U.S. President Donald Trump told Reuters the U.S. Iran operation is ahead of schedule though declined to give a timeline, adding that he wants to be involved in choosing Iran's next leader. He also expressed support for Kurdish forces launching an offensive against Iran and said he would take assistance from any country when asked about an offer of support from Ukraine on drones. In U.S. data ahead of Friday's payrolls report, jobless claims were largely unchanged in the latest week and Challenger's measure of announced job cuts fell to 48.3K in February. Three ECB policymakers warned that a prolonged Iran war drawing in more countries would likely push euro-zone inflation higher and weigh on growth. Separately, Israel's ambassador said it will soon become much harder for Iran to disrupt shipping in the Strait of Hormuz and noted that Tehran’s missile fire is already declining. The dollar index stopped short of its weekly high seen after the first wave of attacks on Iran though one-month risk reversals favor further upside should volatility remain high. Any close above the 100 level would likely point to further gains.
EUR/USD traded heavy below 1.16 with elevated oil prices reinforcing the terms-of-trade drag. Rebounds near-term focus on Tuesday’s 1.1530 swing low, a break of which could open the way to 1.14. GBP/USD softened, but long tails suggest support near 1.33. Price action is largely driven by ongoing U.S./Israel–Iran hostilities though sticky UK inflation plus rising wages limit the scope for a more dovish Bank of England outlook. AUD/USD slid as a softer risk tone amid geopolitical tensions, higher Treasury yields, sliding CNH and lower metal prices weighed. Limited signs of de-escalation were keeping risks skewed lower into the weekend with near-term support at 0.6980–0.7000.
USD/JPY held firm as Iran-related escalation pushed WTI toward $80/bbl and weighed on equities. A bullish candle lends support though the pair is struggling to top 158 as intervention risks linger.
Treasury yields were up 4 to 6 basis points in solid futures turnover with the 2s-10s curve slipping to a new year-to-date low of +53.9bp.
The S&P 500 fell 1.29%.
Gold slid 1.2% and copper dropped 1.7%.
Heading toward the close: EUR/USD -0.42%, USD/JPY +0.46%, GBP/USD -0.31%, AUD/USD -1.23%, DXY +0.47%, EUR/JPY +0.02%, GBP/JPY +0.11%, AUD/JPY -0.77%.(Editing by Burton Frierson Reporting by Robert Fullem)


















