Dollar heads for weekly drop as jobs data dims Fed hike bets

U.S. dollar banknotes are seen in this illustration taken March 24, 2026. Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo




By Reuters

The U.S. dollar fell towards ​its biggest weekly loss in 12 weeks on Friday after a tepid U.S. jobs report cooled market expectations ‌for a near-term Federal Reserve interest rate hike, providing some relief for the embattled Japanese yen.




Broad dollar weakness lifted the euro to near a two-week high at $1.1472, up 0.6% on the week, while sterling firmed to $1.3380 for a 1.2% weekly gain, its best in nearly three months.

That also offered some ​respite for the Japanese yen , pushing it back above 161 per dollar, but markets remained nervous about intervention risks ​after a sudden jump on Thursday lifted the currency from a 40-year low of 162.84.




U.S. JOBS GROWTH ⁠SLOWS

The dollar took a hit after U.S. job growth slowed sharply in June and payroll gains for the prior two months were ​revised lower, prompting traders to pare bets on a near-term Fed rate rise.

Markets are now pricing in about a 35% chance for ​a hike at the September meeting, according to LSEG data, down from 55% prior to the data. U.S. Treasury yields also pulled back from earlier highs, with those on interest rate sensitive 2-year notes snapping a three-day streak of gains with a 4 basis-point drop.




“We don’t have a hike in our ​forecast, so this was in line with our views that we would get a turnaround here eventually and a weaker dollar,” ​said Karl Steiner, head of analysis at SEB. “I wouldn’t be surprised if we see some more downside.”

The dollar index , which measures the greenback against ‌a ⁠basket of currencies including the yen and the euro, was roughly 0.3% lower at 100.68 after a 0.5% dip on Thursday. It is now down 0.7% for the week, the biggest weekly drop since early April.




YEN INTERVENTION FEARS LINGER

Although the yen has clawed back from 40-year lows, investors remained on high alert for possible intervention during a holiday-thinned session with U.S. markets closed for Independence Day.

“You ​have to have it on ​the radar,” said SEB’s Steiner, ⁠referring to the possibility of intervention. “Historically they have preferred to do it whenever there is lower liquidity.”




Japan issued a fresh warning to currency markets on Friday as Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama said Tokyo ​was in regular contact with Washington on foreign exchange issues and remained ready to support the ​yen. Japan’s Chief ⁠Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara said they were closely monitoring market movements with a high sense of urgency.

Markets are concerned about Japanese officials abandoning their habit of telegraphing risks, instead signalling a more targeted campaign to squeeze speculators and raise the cost of betting against the battered yen.




“The ⁠bigger question ​is what comes next,” said Tony Sycamore, an analyst at IG, pointing to ​the 162.83 level as a short-term top for dollar-yen.

“Whether it becomes a more meaningful medium-term high will ultimately depend on incoming U.S. data and, to some degree, ​developments in the Japanese government bond market.”