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Strong NFP Sends the Dollar to a Two-Month High: USD/JPY Brea
Sommario:As we enter Monday, 8 June 2026, the main theme in FX has shifted from “waiting for direction before NFP” to “repricing the Fed after a strong jobs report.” Last Fridays US May non-farm payrolls came
As we enter Monday, 8 June 2026, the main theme in FX has shifted from “waiting for direction before NFP” to “repricing the Fed after a strong jobs report.” Last Fridays US May non-farm payrolls came in much stronger than expected, pushing the US dollar to a two-month high, lifting Treasury yields, and increasing market expectations that the Federal Reserve may raise rates again this year.
The dollars strength is not only about safe-haven demand. It is being driven by a broader combination of strong employment, sticky inflation, higher energy risks, and weaker risk appetite.
US non-farm payrolls rose by 172,000 in May, far above expectations of around 85,000. The unemployment rate stayed at 4.3% for the third consecutive month, while March and April payrolls were revised up by a combined 93,000. This suggests that the US labour market was not simply strong for one month, but had previously been underestimated.
For FX traders, the message is clear: a resilient labour market gives the Fed less reason to rush into easing. After the data, market pricing for a potential December rate hike rose sharply, with some estimates moving above 70%. The dollar has regained support from both the interest-rate side and the safe-haven side.
The details of the report were also dollar-positive. Job gains were mainly seen in leisure and hospitality, local government, and healthcare. Average hourly earnings rose 0.3% month-on-month and 3.4% year-on-year. Wage growth is not out of control, but it remains firm enough to keep services inflation sticky. If energy prices stay elevated due to Middle East tensions, the Fed may have even more reason to maintain a hawkish stance.
This is why rate-cut expectations are being pushed further out. Goldman Sachs has reportedly delayed its first Fed rate-cut forecast to 2027, citing stronger US activity, firmer employment, and oil-related inflation risks. Although another rate hike is not the base case, the probability has clearly increased.
The most sensitive currency pair today is USD/JPY. The pair has climbed to around 160.34, a level that places Japans intervention risk back in focus. Japan has previously spent heavily to support the yen, but the currency has again weakened toward the 160 area. The yen is under pressure from three sides: higher US yields, rising energy import costs, and softer Japanese growth data. For traders, USD/JPY is no longer a simple trend trade. It is now a market where bullish fundamentals meet sharp policy risk.
Oil is another key driver. Middle East tensions and uncertainty around the Strait of Hormuz have revived concerns over global energy supply. If one of the world‘s most important oil transit routes becomes more costly or less predictable, crude prices may continue to carry a risk premium. Higher oil prices make it harder for inflation to return to target, which in turn supports the Fed’s higher-for-longer narrative and strengthens the dollar.
Risk sentiment is also weaker. Asian technology stocks, especially AI-related names, have seen a sharp pullback. Strong US jobs data, higher Fed rate expectations, and disappointment around major semiconductor earnings have pressured high-valuation growth stocks. This matters for FX because currencies such as the Australian dollar, New Zealand dollar, Korean won, and other Asian currencies are highly sensitive to global risk appetite. When equities fall and investors reduce exposure, capital often flows back into the dollar.
The euro remains under pressure despite support from European Central Bank expectations. Eurozone inflation is still above target, and markets largely expect the ECB to raise rates at its 11 June meeting. However, the problem for the euro is that ECB tightening is driven more by inflation pressure than by strong growth. As long as the US data remains firm, EUR/USD is likely to stay dominated by the dollar side.
Sterling is also trading as a passive reflection of dollar strength. The UK still faces inflation and energy-related risks, but todays key drivers are US jobs data, Fed pricing, and global risk sentiment. GBP/USD may struggle to rebound unless upcoming US inflation data comes in weaker than expected.
The Australian dollar faces an unfriendly backdrop. Australias first-quarter GDP grew only 0.3%, below expectations, while net exports and household consumption remained weak. At the same time, a 4.75% increase in the minimum wage from 1 July may add to cost pressures. This leaves the RBA in a difficult position: growth is cooling, but inflation risks have not fully disappeared. AUD/USD therefore remains vulnerable to both a stronger dollar and weaker global risk appetite.
Risk Warning: This article is for general market information and commentary only. It does not constitute investment advice. FX, commodities, precious metals, and CFD trading involve high risk. Traders should manage positions carefully and control risk exposure.
Disclaimer:
Le opinioni di questo articolo rappresentano solo le opinioni personali dell’autore e non costituiscono consulenza in materia di investimenti per questa piattaforma. La piattaforma non garantisce l’accuratezza, la completezza e la tempestività delle informazioni relative all’articolo, né è responsabile delle perdite causate dall’uso o dall’affidamento delle informazioni relative all’articolo.
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