Been watching the Dollar's moves lately and there's something interesting happening. It's holding up okay for now, but honestly it feels more fragile than the surface suggests.



The Middle East ceasefire situation is basically keeping the USD bid right now. Derek Halpenny from MUFG points out that as long as people are uncertain about whether this ceasefire actually sticks, there's a natural bid for the safe-haven currency. You see it in the 2-year Treasury yields too - they've ticked up 6-7 basis points from the lows, which tells you the market's not fully convinced this peace holds.

Here's the thing though - if you're waiting for stronger Dollar fundamentals or a shift in Fed policy to drive the next leg up, you're probably going to be disappointed. The underlying story just isn't there. The only real scenario where the Dollar catches a meaningful bid is if we see genuine risk-off sentiment kick in. That's the real catalyst.

What's actually telling is how modest the Dollar's gains have been throughout all this uncertainty. When you look at the moves, it really exposes how weak the fundamental backdrop is. The currency's basically being propped up by geopolitical anxiety rather than anything structural.

So the play here is straightforward: as long as risk-off flows keep coming, the Dollar gets support. But the moment we get some resolution or risk appetite returns, you could see those gains evaporate pretty quickly. Keep watching that risk-off dynamic - it's the main thing holding this up right now.
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