USD Softens as GBP and EUR Seek Stability.

  • USD is under mild pressure, and much of further upside may be constrained unless there are major surprises.

  • EUR is tentatively stabilising thanks to weaker dollar dynamics, but remains vulnerable to eurozone-specific risks and will need stronger data to break higher.

  • GBP is holding up reasonably but lacks a strong catalyst for sustained strength; watch UK macro and policy signals.

USD:

The dollar has been under pressure in recent sessions as markets increasingly price in the possibility of policy easing by the Federal Reserve following comments that emphasised downside risks and a more cautious tone. The retreat in the dollar is supported by declining U.S. Treasury yields and a broader risk-on sentiment that reduces safe-haven demand for USD. Reserve managers’ behaviour also suggests that the USD is not being heavily propped up by central bank intervention, meaning private-sector flows dominate near-term moves.

In the near term, unless a strong economic surprise emerges, the dollar may remain on the defensive. Key upcoming triggers include US inflation data, labour market statistics as well as any fresh Fed commentary. On the medium term, a sustained dollar weakness scenario is plausible if global growth holds up and other major central banks shift toward easing or more dovish stances.


EUR: 

EUR/USD has shown some recovery from earlier weak levels as the dollar softens, with the euro finding modest support at key technical zones. Key concerns remain: the eurozone faces headwinds from slower growth, political uncertainty (especially in France) and a more cautious stance from the European Central Bank.

Near-term, EUR/USD may oscillate between 1.1550 support and 1.1700 resistance unless a major catalyst emerges. This could be seen from eurozone inflation/activity data, ECB commentary, as well as further USD softness. If the eurozone data disappoints or the dollar rebounds, EUR/USD could again test lower support near 1.1480–1.1500.


GBP: 

GBP/USD has been consolidating in the roughly 1.33-1.34 region recently. Historical levels show the pair hovered around 1.3403 towards the end of last week. The pound’s strength has been tempered by weaker domestic data — for example, slower wage growth in the UK dampens near-term outlook for the Bank of England to raise or maintain tight policy. On the positive side, a softer dollar and some improvement in risk sentiment have given the pound some upward support.

Without a positive UK surprise (strong inflation, unexpected growth or labour data), the pound’s upside appears limited. Watch for the UK autumn Budget and any statements from BoE policymakers — these will influence GBP flows.

*All rates shown are indicative of interbank rates and should only be used for indication purposes only. It is important to note that foreign exchange rates fluctuate and that rates may vary depending on the amount and the base currency that is purchased or sold. Rates are correct as of 8:00am UK time. CentralFX are not responsible for the rates shown.