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Dollar Steady as High Oil Pressures Rupee
Abstract:The U.S. dollar held steady near a two-month high while the Indian rupee faced pressure amid surging crude oil prices. A closure of the Strait of Hormuz drove Brent crude above $94, pushing U.S. headline inflation higher and keeping Asian currency markets cautious as traders reprice Federal Reserve rate expectations.

The U.S. dollar held near a two-month high while the Indian rupee faced pressure following an energy-driven spike in U.S. inflation and disrupted shipping routes in the Middle East. Stronger-than-expected inflation data has shifted Federal Reserve interest rate expectations, keeping currency traders cautious across Asian markets.
Rupee and Asian Currencies
The U.S. Dollar Index hovered near the 100 level, sustaining recent gains near a two-month high. Against this backdrop, most Asian currencies traded in narrow ranges. The Indian rupee came under pressure, with the USD/INR pair rising 0.2%, though the spot closed at 95.2650 against the dollar. Elsewhere, the South Korean won weakened as the USD/KRW pair edged 0.2% higher. The Chinese yuan onshore pair traded flat, and the Australian dollar changed hands near the $0.700 mark.
U.S. Inflation Shifts Fed Outlook
U.S. consumer prices accelerated in May to an annual rate of 4.2%, marking the fastest headline pace in over three years. The increase was largely driven by energy costs tied to the Middle East conflict. However, core CPI, which strips out volatile components, showed a softer gain of 0.2% for the month and an annual rate of 2.9%. The inflation print reinforces expectations that the Federal Reserve will keep interest rates elevated, with traders pricing in a potential rate hike as early as October.
Yen Tests Levels Ahead of BOJ
The Japanese yen remained under scrutiny, with the USD/JPY pair trading largely unchanged in the lower 160 yen range at 160.52. This leaves the exchange rate above the 160 threshold that triggered intervention by Japanese authorities in April. Traders are looking ahead to the Bank of Japan policy meeting on June 15-16, where markets expect policymakers to raise interest rates to 1.0%. However, BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda has been hospitalized for medical treatment and will miss the upcoming meeting, adding uncertainty to the central bank's policy path.
Oil and Gold React to Shipping Halt
Commodities linked to macro sentiment saw volatile price action after Iranian state media reported the Strait of Hormuz was completely closed to maritime traffic following fresh military strikes. Brent crude futures jumped nearly 2% to trade above $94 a barrel, while West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude for July delivery surged 2.60% to $92.63 per barrel. Meanwhile, gold moved higher to $4,093 an ounce, rebounding from an earlier six-month low of $4,024 amid the heightened geopolitical tension and inflation concerns.
Escalating energy costs and resilient U.S. inflation are creating a challenging macro environment for emerging market currencies like the rupee. With the U.S. dollar supported by the prospect of higher interest rates and global crude oil supplies constrained, markets face sustained upward pressure on inflation and tightened USD liquidity conditions.
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