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Dollar climbs to two-month peak as Fed hike bets ramp up

Rae Wee (Reuters)
Singapore
Mon, June 8, 2026 Published on Jun. 8, 2026 Published on 2026-06-08T09:08:01+07:00

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US dollar, Euro, Yen and Pound banknotes are seen in this illustration created on May 4, 2025. US dollar, Euro, Yen and Pound banknotes are seen in this illustration created on May 4, 2025. (Reuters/Dado Ruvic)

T

he dollar was perched near a two-month high on Monday after a blowout US jobs report sent traders ramping up bets on a Federal Reserve rate hike this year, while the yen teetered further into the intervention zone.

Early moves in currencies were largely muted with markets in Australia closed for a holiday, though the dollar held to its strong gains made in the wake of the report which showed nonfarm payrolls increased by 172,000 jobs last ​month, far exceeding estimates.

Against the dollar, the euro fell to a two-month low of $1.1507, while sterling struggled at a three-week trough of $1.33165.

The Australian and New Zealand dollars similarly slid to their lowest in two months at $0.7016 and $0.5779, respectively.

"The US payrolls report released [...] paints a picture of a US labour market that is strengthening despite the ongoing energy price shock," said Jonas Goltermann, chief markets economist at Capital Economics.

"That combination makes policy tightening by the Fed later this year increasingly probable [...] we now expect the FOMC to deliver two 25-basis-point rate hikes later this year, in response to the energy supply shock and the re-acceleration of the US labor market."

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Prior to the release of the jobs report, traders had been gradually adding to bets on a Fed hike this year, as the global energy crisis tied to the Iran war threatens to stoke inflation.

US President Donald Trump said on Sunday he would tell Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu not to strike back after Iran fired a salvo of missiles at Israeli targets in retaliation for an attack on the outskirts of Beirut, news outlet Axios reported.

Markets are now pricing in a more than 70 percent chance that the Fed will raise rates in December, sharply up from a 45 percent probability a week ago, according to the CME FedWatch tool.

Yen on tenterhooks

The strength in the dollar has in turn spelled more pain for the yen, which fetched 160.29 per dollar.

The Japanese currency has now erased its gains made in the wake of Tokyo's 11.7 trillion yen (US$73.01 billion) intervention just over a month ago, when it slid to its lowest since July 2024 at 160.725.

"The yen remains under pressure due to the persistent interest rate disadvantage, with the Bank of Japan still slow to normalize policy despite hawkish shifts at other central banks," said David Meier, an economist at Julius Baer.

"While the interventions have bought the authorities some time, the outlook hinges largely on monetary policy action."

Sources told Reuters that the BOJ is expected to raise interest rates this month unless a sharp escalation in the Middle East conflict upends markets.

In cryptocurrencies, bitcoin was up more than 1 percent to $62,838.60, rebounding after sliding to its lowest since October 2024 last week.

Ether rose more than 3 percent to $1,680.87, having also slid to a 14-month low last week.

Booming AI stocks and a series of glittering upcoming new listings such as SpaceX have lured capital away from bitcoin, leaving the world's largest cryptocurrency struggling since the start of the year.

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