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Dollar near one-month low as cooling inflation curbs Fed hike bets

By Thomson Reuters Jul 15, 2026 | 8:56 PM

By Jiaxing Li

HONG KONG, July 16 (Reuters) – The U.S. dollar hovered near a one-month low on Thursday, as soft inflation data reinforced bets that the Federal Reserve can stay patient on interest rate hikes, while escalation in ​Middle East hostilities added upside risk to the inflation outlook.

The greenback slipped ‌against the Japanese yen for the third trading session, by 0.1% to 162.075 yen. The euro was 0.1% higher at $1.1472, its strongest in a month.

Sterling held near a two-month high at $1.354 on market expectations that Britain’s incoming prime minister will pick a fiscally conservative finance minister.

The Australian and New Zealand dollars ‌were ​both down about 0.1%, at $0.6995 and $0.5842 respectively.

The U.S. dollar index, ⁠which tracks the currency against ⁠six peers, was little changed at 100.47, hovering near its lowest since June 18. It has fallen 0.8% over the previous two sessions and is on track for a weekly decline.

U.S. producer prices unexpectedly fell in June, in their biggest ​decline in 14 months, adding to evidence that inflation was easing before the latest flare-up in the Middle East.

The data, together with surprisingly soft consumer inflation and a ⁠slowdown in job growth in June, effectively rule ⁠out a Fed interest rate increase this month.

Chances for a hike ​in July were slashed to 11%, versus a 45% implied probability at the start of ​the week. Markets still see even odds of at least a 25 ‌basis-point increase in September, according to Fed funds futures prices via CME Group.

“The recent dollar weakness appears to be a correction from previous highs. Markets had aggressively priced in a July rate hike, which now looks somewhat overblown given that inflation is cooling ⁠fast,” said Bosco Wu, investment strategist at Bank of East Asia.

However, the tightening trajectory is intact as one month of cooling data is unlikely to signal sustained inflation slowdown, and ⁠the flare-up in the Middle ‌East should limit downside for the greenback, Wu said.

The escalation ⁠in hostilities between the U.S. and Iran kept oil prices ​near one-month ‌highs, maintaining pressure on the inflation outlook.

The U.S. struck Iran’s ​coastal defences and ⁠missile sites on Wednesday after re-imposing a naval blockade of its ports, while Iran threatened to shut off more regional energy exports, saying it was engaged in an “existential war” with America.

Oil prices rose for a fourth consecutive day on Thursday, with Brent crude futures last trading near a one-month high at $85.28 a barrel.

(Reporting by Jiaxing Li in Hong Kong; ​Editing by Christopher Cushing)