By ForexTime
Concerns about an incoming economic slowdown have hit markets, while continued hawkish rhetoric by Fed speakers has added to negative risk sentiment.
- Asian stocks have traded mixed with most major indices rangebound following the negative handover from Wall Street.
- The dollar had a choppy session yesterday on the back of the BoJ meeting and softer data and is in the red to kick off this morning’s session.
- Gold is trying to hold onto to recent highs and remains above $1900.
Weak US economic data spurred further speculation that inflation is peaking, and policymakers may be nearing the end of their hiking cycles.
US retail sales fell more than expected, industrial production declined and US PPI also slid more than forecast.
But while slowing inflation has been a positive for markets, worries about slowing economic growth have started to bite as well.
This did actually push the DXY to new cycle lows below 102 on more dovish Fed rate expectations, with the May lows also offering immediate support to the benchmark US dollar index, for now.
A further capitulation in dollar bulls could invite bears to push the DXY into sub-100 levels.

Free Reports:
Get our Weekly Commitment of Traders Reports - See where the biggest traders (Hedge Funds and Commercial Hedgers) are positioned in the futures markets on a weekly basis.
Sign Up for Our Stock Market Newsletter – Get updated on News, Charts & Rankings of Public Companies when you join our Stocks Newsletter
BoJ seen to bow to the inevitable
The yen has reversed nearly all its losses from yesterday’s spike higher in USD/JPY, even after the BoJ defied hawkish speculation yesterday that it would widen its yield curve control band further.
Policymakers are seen eventually changing or abandoning the YCC policy when Governor Kuroda steps down in April after he laid the groundwork in December with only the third change to the yield cap in seven years.
That window when he hands over the baton of the BoJ governing board may herald more extreme volatility in the yen.
USD/JPY has been at the forefront of the broad dollar decline since October.
Intervention helped near the highs just shy of 152. Easing US CPI prints, especially in November saw huge moves to the downside.
The upper part of the long-term descending channel, with its series of lower highs and lower lows, was nearly touched yesterday on the spike high after the BoJ meeting, only to be repelled by USDJPY’s 21-day simple moving average (SMA).
But the sharp about-turn looks strongly bearish with funds loading up on long yen positions in anticipation of more BoJ policy changes going forward.

Article by ForexTime
ForexTime Ltd (FXTM) is an award winning international online forex broker regulated by CySEC 185/12 www.forextime.com

- The Middle East conflict is already driving inflation higher across the world Apr 24, 2026
- Gold Falls Nearly 3.0% Over the Week Amid Geopolitical Pressure Apr 24, 2026
- The diplomatic deadlock between the US and Iran is undermining investors’ appetite for risk Apr 23, 2026
- EUR/USD Falls for Third Day as Geopolitics and Strong Dollar Dictate Terms Apr 23, 2026
- Negotiations between the US and Iran have failed. Oil prices are back above 90 dollars per barrel Apr 22, 2026
- USD/JPY Pulls Higher: Yen Doubts Bank of Japan Apr 22, 2026
- NZD and CAD strengthen amid rising inflationary pressure Apr 21, 2026
- Pound Declines Amid Geopolitics and Political Risks Apr 21, 2026
- EUR/USD Starts the Week Higher, but the Outlook Remains Unstable Apr 20, 2026
- The situation in the Strait of Hormuz remains uncertain Apr 20, 2026