USDX Eases as US-Iran Peace Deal Reduces Safe-Haven Demand
Key Takeaways
-USDX fell to 99.21, testing support near 99.10 amid peace-deal optimism.
-Oil dropped sharply, easing inflation pressure and reducing safe-haven demand.
-Fed rate expectations have been trimmed, with a 50% chance of a December hike.
-Technical resistance sits at 99.32–99.52, with support near 99.10–99.05.
-Dollar direction will depend on central bank statements, oil moves, and geopolitical updates.
USDX weakened on Monday, trading near 99.21 after falling to a 10-day low. The move followed news of a preliminary US-Iran peace framework, which included halting US sanctions and reopening the Strait of Hormuz.
Oil prices fell sharply, with Brent down over 4% to $83.82, reducing inflation fears and safe-haven demand. The dollar lost ground against major peers, including the AUD, NZD, EUR, and GBP.
What Traders Are Watching?
Traders focus on USDX as the index reacts to easing geopolitical risk and inflation pressure. Peace optimism is reducing energy-related inflation expectations, while recent PPI and CPI data showed mixed signals, keeping the Fed under scrutiny. Current market pricing shows roughly a 50% chance of a December rate hike, down from over 70% a week prior.
Technical Analysis and Key Levels
USDX is trading near its short-term moving averages: MA5 at 99.169, MA10 at 99.178, and MA20 at 99.226. A break above 99.32 could extend a recovery toward 99.52, while a drop below 99.10 may expose 99.05 as downside support. The index remains cautious below 99.32, awaiting confirmation from geopolitical and macroeconomic developments.
Trading Outlook
The dollar’s near-term direction depends on confirmation from central bank decisions and further US-Iran developments. A sustained move above resistance levels could signal buyers returning, while a drop below support would suggest sellers remain in control. Traders should also monitor oil prices and risk flows as indicators for USDX momentum.
Read more on how USDX levels respond to Fed policy, oil price changes, and Middle East developments in the article below.
Publication date:
2026-06-15 08:48:47 (GMT)