By ForexTime
*Note: This report was written before the US NFP data was published*
- FXTM USDInd ↓ 0.7% MTD
- China retaliatory tariffs take effect 10th Feb
- Powell’s testimony + US CPI = more USD volatility?
- US CPI sparked moves of ↑ 0.9% & ↓ 0.6% over past year
- Technical levels: 109.10, 108.20 & 107.00
China’s retaliatory tariffs against the United States are set to take effect on Monday 10th February.
How Trump responds may set the tone for global markets in the week ahead.
Beyond tariffs, Powell’s testimony and key data including the latest US CPI could present fresh trading opportunities:
Sunday, February 9th
- CN50: China PPI, CPI
Monday, 10th February
Free Reports:
Download Our Metatrader 4 Indicators – Put Our Free MetaTrader 4 Custom Indicators on your charts when you join our Weekly Newsletter
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.
- China’s retaliatory tariffs on US goods take effect
Tuesday, 11th February
- AU200: Australia Westpac consumer confidence
- MXN: Mexico industrial production, international reserves
- ZAR: South Africa manufacturing production
- GBP: BOE Governor Andrew Bailey speech
- USDInd: Fed Chairman Jerome Powell testimony, Fed speak
Wednesday, 12th February
- USDInd: Fed Chairman Jerome Powell testimony, US January CPI, Fed speak
Thursday, 13th February
- EUR: Eurozone industrial production
- GER40: Germany CPI
- JP225: Japan PPI
- UK100: UK industrial production, GDP
- US500: US initial jobless claims, PPI
Friday, 14th February
- EUR: Eurozone GDP
- NZD: New Zealand food prices, BusinessNZ manufacturing PMI
- USDInd: US retail sales, industrial production
FXTM’s USDInd is under the spotlight after shedding roughly 2% from Monday’s peak.
Fading concerns over Trump’s tariff threats have weakened the dollar. However, an air of caution still lingers as trade war fears keep investors on edge.
Prices remain within a range on the weekly charts with support at 107.00 and resistance at 110.00.
*Note: This chart was created before the US NFP data was published*

The USDInd tracks the dollar’s performance against a basket of six different G10 currencies, including the Euro, British Pound, Japanese Yen, and Canadian dollar.
With all the above said, here are 4 reasons why the USDInd could see more price swings:
1) China’s retaliatory tariffs
China is expected to slap 15% tariffs on U.S. coal and liquefied natural gas as well as a 10% tariff on crude oil, farm equipment, pickup trucks, and large-engine cars.
These are expected to come into effect on Monday 10th February.
- If China’s retaliation results in Trump slapping more tariffs on Chinese imports, this could fuel trade war fears – boosting safe-haven assets like the dollar.
- Should China’s retrained response open the doors to possible negotiations, the dollar may weaken as trade war fears cool.
2) Fed Chair Powell’s 2-day Testimony
Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s semi-annual testimony before Congress may provide key insight into future policy moves.
During January’s FOMC meeting, Powell stated that the Fed was in no hurry to cut interest rates due to a strong economy and stubborn inflation.
- Should Powell repeat the same message and strike a hawkish note, this could support the dollar.
- If the Fed Chair sound more dovish than expected, this may weaken the USDInd.
3) US January CPI report
The January Consumer Price Index (CPI) published on Wednesday 12th February may influence Fed cut bets.
Markets are forecasting:
- CPI year-on-year (January 2025 vs. January 2024) to remain unchanged at 2.9%.
- Core CPI year-on-year to remain unchanged at 3.2%.
- CPI month-on-month (January 2025 vs December 2024) to cool 0.3% from 0.4%.
- Core CPI month-on-month to rise 0.3% from 0.2%.
Over the past 12 months, the US CPI has triggered upside moves of as much as 0.9% or declines of 0.6% in a 6-hour window post-release.
Note: The US retail sales report, industrial production and speeches by Fed officials are likely to influence the dollar.
- A softer-than-expected US CPI report could pull the USDInd lower as Fed cut bets jump.
- Should the inflation report print above market forecasts, this could support the USDInd.
4) Technical forces
The USDInd is under pressure on the daily timeframe. Prices are trading below the 21 and 50-day SMA.
- A breakdown below 107.00 could open a path toward 106.40 and the 100-day SMA at 105.90.
- Should prices push back above 108.20, this could see an inline toward the 21-day SMA, 109.10 and 110.00.

*Note: This chart was created before the US NFP data was published*
Article by ForexTime
ForexTime Ltd (FXTM) is an award winning international online forex broker regulated by CySEC 185/12 www.forextime.com

- Oil prices fall back to pre‑war levels. Silver drops to a 7‑month low Jun 25, 2026
- Gold Falls to an Eight-Month Low: This May Not Be the Bottom Jun 25, 2026
- Stock indices came under heavy selling pressure amid growing skepticism about AI investments Jun 24, 2026
- The Pound Is Pressured Not by Politics, but by a Strong US Dollar Jun 24, 2026
- Global crude oil prices continued to decline. The AUD/USD exchange rate hit an 11‑week low Jun 23, 2026
- EUR/USD Remains Under Sellers’ Control as the Dollar Stays Strong Jun 23, 2026
- Gold Falls for the Third Consecutive Week: Is There Still Upside Potential? Jun 22, 2026
- Bank Indonesia raised its interest rate. Norges Bank and the SNB left rates unchanged Jun 19, 2026
- EUR/USD Loses Ground as Market Sentiment Favours the US Dollar Jun 19, 2026
- GBPUSD Awaits Bank of England Meeting Near April Lows Jun 18, 2026