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Caught the Dollar Index stuck in a tight range around 96.92 this Thursday, and it's honestly been pretty choppy. The Fed's holding steady at 3.50-3.75%, and that January jobs report really threw a wrench into rate cut expectations - 130K payrolls was the biggest monthly gain in over a year, which pushed unemployment down to 4.3%. Markets had to reschedule the next cut from June all the way out to July because of that surprise. With only 5% odds on a March move now, it's clear the Fed's taking a breather after those three consecutive cuts last year.
On the technicals, price is basically pinned just below the 200 EMA at 97.04, which keeps acting as a ceiling on rallies. Wednesday saw a rejection from 97.27 that turned into a sharp selloff down to 96.49, creating a wide reversal candle. The thing is, Thursday's been range-bound between 96.80 and 96.95 with almost no conviction either way. The 50 EMA is flattening out and converging toward price from above, which tells me momentum is getting squeezed pretty tight right now. If we break below 96.80, the next real support is that 96.49 low, then the 96.43 zone which lines up with a Fibonacci 61.8% retracement on the higher timeframes. Stochastic is creeping into oversold, so a bullish crossover there could spark a bounce back toward the 200 EMA, but we'd need a sustained close above 97.04 to actually flip the bias back bullish. The delayed CPI print coming Friday is the main catalyst everyone's watching - economists are looking for headline inflation to ease to 2.5% from December's 2.7%, and any surprise could reshape the whole rate outlook. Meanwhile, the Yen's been getting stronger thanks to some jawboning from Japanese authorities and optimism around Prime Minister Takaichi's fiscal push, which is also weighing on the Dollar. Until we get through Friday's data, I'd expect more of this consolidation.