MUFG: The USD - FJElite

11 May 2026 08:44Elite US Indexes USD

The US dollar has staged a modest rebound at the start of this week helping to lift the dollar index back above the 98.000-level which has provided good support over the past month. The US dollar has derived support overnight from reports that the US and Iran have both rejected each other’s latest peace proposals putting a dampener on investor optimism that a deal could be reached soon to end the conflict and re-open the Strait of Hormuz. President Trump described Iran’s latest proposal as "TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE". According to the WSJ, Iran offered to transfer some of its stockpile of highly enriched uranium to a third country but rejected the idea of dismantling its nuclear facilities. However, Iran’s semi-official news agency Tasnim stated that the WSJ’s reporting on the proposals for handling nuclear material was “not true". The state-run IRIB News added that Iran has also rejected President Trump’s latest plan describing it as tantamount to surrender and insisted that the US must pay war damages. The US had proposed that ran permit passage through the Strait and Washington would end its blockage of Iranian ports in the next month. The latest developments continue to highlight the risk of a more prolonged closure of the Start of Hormuz which would be disruptive for the global economy and financial markets. The lack of progress in peace talks has lifted the price of Brent back above USD 105/barrel overnight. The negative spillover impact on investor risk sentiment and high beta currencies has been muted so far.

At the same time, the US dollar has been supported in part by the release of the stronger than expected nonfarm payrolls report for April. The report revealed that the US economy added 115k jobs in April following on from the upwardly revised increase of 185k in March. It was the first two consecutive months of job growth since April and May of last year. The report provides further reassuring evidence that the US labour market appears to have strengthened in 2026 after the weak end to last year. Employment growth has averaged 76k/month in the first four months of this year compared to average jobs losses of -10k/month in the final four months of last year. It supports the Fed’s view that downside risks to the labour market have eased which alongside the energy price shock has helped to ease pressure on the Fed to deliver further rate cuts in the near-term. However, the report was not strong enough to encourage the US rate market to price in Fed rate hikes curtailing support for a stronger US dollar. In contrast, the household survey was much weaker revealing job losses of -226k while the labour force shrunk again by -92k. Still, the unemployment rate held steady at 4.3%. Overall, we believe the latest developments favour the Fed leaving rates on hold.