US Dollar Dominated Global Currencies As The Greenbank Surges To 2-Year High, What's Driving Rally?

The US dollar kicked off the first trading session of 2025 with a bang, climbing to a two-year high on Thursday. Boosted by strong economic fundamentals, robust labour market data, and expectations of relatively elevated US interest rates, the greenback continued its dominance, overshadowing other major currencies in global trade.

Dollar's Ascent

The dollar index, a measure of the currency against six major peers, rose by 0.77% to settle at 109.38. Analysts credit the Federal Reserve's cautious stance on interest rate cuts and US economic resilience as the primary factors behind this rally.

Dollar

The Federal Reserve has signalled that inflation, still above its 2% annual target, necessitates a gradual approach to monetary easing. The central bank's policies, combined with US President-elect Donald Trump's anticipated growth-centric measures, are fueling optimism about sustained economic expansion.

"In terms of 2025 economic growth, there's no rival to the dollar," noted Adam Button, chief currency analyst at ForexLive. Button highlighted that the strength of the US stock market further amplifies capital flows into the greenback, adding, "The dollar is the only game in town until there is a genuine stumble in the US economy."

Labor Market

Fresh data underpins the dollar's robust performance, with US unemployment claims dropping to an eight-month low last week. This indicates a strong labour market, minimizing fears of an economic slowdown as 2025 begins.

Global Currencies

The dollar's rise exerted significant pressure on major global currencies, triggering notable losses. The Euro fell 1.01%, touching $1.025-its lowest level since November 2022. Breaking below the $1.03 technical support level exacerbated the sell-off, with traders anticipating deep interest rate cuts by the European Central Bank (ECB). Policymaker Yannis Stournaras suggested the ECB's main rate could fall from 3% to 2% by autumn.

The British pound dropped 1.19% to $1.2368, its lowest since April 2024. The currency's decline accelerated after breaching the $1.2475 support level. The dollar gained 0.47% against the Japanese Yen, trading at 157.61 yen. Although the Bank of Japan is expected to raise interest rates this year, immediate policy action seems unlikely.

The Chinese Yuan languished at 14-month lows amid concerns about the nation's economic health, potential US import tariffs under the Trump administration, and declining local yields.

Bitcoin Bucks the Trend

Amid the currency turmoil, cryptocurrencies showed resilience. Bitcoin, the leading digital asset, climbed 2.77% to $97,404.93, hinting at investor optimism in the crypto space despite dollar dominance.

Outlook for 2025

As the dollar asserts its supremacy, analysts foresee limited challenges to its dominance in the near term. With US economic growth outpacing global peers and the Fed maintaining a cautious monetary policy, the greenback is well-positioned to sustain its momentum.

Conversely, divergent central bank policies-marked by anticipated rate cuts in Europe and slower policy normalization in Japan-could keep global currencies under pressure. Meanwhile, the focus remains on whether the Bank of Japan and ECB can enact measures to counter the dollar's strength.

*Inputs from Reuters*

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