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Dollar Index Softens as Fed Cut Uncertainty Builds.

November 14, 2025
CSFXadmin

Market Overview

The US Dollar Index (DXY), which tracks the U.S. dollar against a basket of six major currencies, has slipped toward the 99.00 level—trading around 99.15 during the U.S. session. The move comes amid growing uncertainty over near-term Federal Reserve rate cuts and the upcoming return of U.S. economic data, which many believe will reveal underlying weakness.


Government Reopening & Data Blind Spot

After a record-setting 43-day government shutdown, funding has been restored through January 30, allowing many federal agencies to resume operations. However, a key consequence is that October’s unemployment rate may never be published due to missing household survey data. This creates a “data void” that complicates how markets assess the economic outlook—and by extension, how the Fed might act.

Analysts are warning that when the flood of delayed reports finally arrives, many could show softness in the labor market and broader slowdown in U.S. activity—potentially weighing further on the dollar.


Fed Signals and Rate-Cut Expectations

Market expectations for a 25 basis-point rate cut by the Fed in December have eased—dropping to about a 50-50 chance, down from higher odds earlier this week. At the same time, comments from Fed officials remain broadly hawkish. Boston Fed President Susan Collins said policy will “likely need to remain unchanged for some time” to balance inflation and employment risks. Similarly, Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic and Cleveland Fed President Beth Hammack have signalled a preference for holding rates steady rather than cutting immediately.

These signals are providing some support for the dollar, but the lack of fresh strong data is capping any meaningful upside momentum.


Technical Outlook

From a technical stance, the DXY’s approach toward the 99.00 support zone is notable. A decisive break below this level could open room toward the 98.50-98.00 territory. On the flip side, if inflation surprises or the Fed speaks more hawkishly than expected, a rebound toward the 100.50-101.00 zone could be triggered. Traders are watching how the index behaves in the near term around the 99.00 threshold.


What Traders Are Watching

  • The resumption of key U.S. economic data—especially labor market and inflation figures—and whether any of the delayed releases show meaningful weakness.
  • Any change in tone from the Fed: If officials pivot toward readiness to cut, the dollar may soften; if they reiterate a hawkish stance, the dollar could gain.
  • U.S. 10-year Treasury yields and real yields: A drop in yields would likely weaken the dollar; a rise could bolster it.
  • Global risk-sentiment shifts: The dollar often acts as a safe haven in risk-off environments, offering potential upside even amid U.S. softness.
  • Technical breakouts or breakdowns around the 99.00 level for the DXY, which may influence short-term positioning and sentiment.

Summary

The U.S. Dollar Index is hovering near 99.00 as markets navigate a complex mix of delayed economic data and shifting expectations for Fed policy. While weaker data would typically favour more aggressive rate cuts—and a weaker dollar—the current backdrop is more ambiguous. The Fed’s hawkish tone and the data blind-spot keep the dollar supported, yet momentum is limited. Traders now await the return of the economic releases, monitor Fed commentary closely, and keep one eye on key technical levels for clues on the next move.