the daily read | FX Focus | 4 June 2026
Dollar Below 100, Euro Strong, Yen Finds Relief: The FX Picture Before Tomorrow’s NFP
DXY at 99.21 is a significant level. Below 100, the dollar is telling a specific story about where the market thinks US rates are going. EUR/USD at 1.1613 and GBP/USD at 1.3424 are both at levels that demand attention heading into tomorrow’s Non-Farm Payrolls.
Currency markets are the most efficient discounting mechanism in finance. The DXY index falling 0.32% to 99.21 today is not just a number — it reflects a collective judgment by the global FX market that US interest rates are going to fall, or at least that the differential between US rates and the rest of the world is narrowing. That judgment gets tested tomorrow at 8:30 AM ET. A strong NFP print flips the script entirely. A weak number confirms what the dollar is already pricing. Let us look at each major pair and what the price levels are telling us.
FX Dashboard — 4 June 2026
| Pair | Rate | Trend | Key Level | NFP Scenario |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DXY (USD Index) | 99.21 | Weak (-0.32%) | 100 = psychological resistance | Soft = 97-98. Hot = back to 101. |
| EUR/USD | 1.1613 | Strong | 1.1650 = near-term target | Soft NFP pushes 1.17+. Hot = 1.14. |
| GBP/USD (Cable) | 1.3424 | Constructive | 1.35 = key resistance | Soft NFP tests 1.35+. Hot = 1.32. |
| USD/JPY | 159.81 | Below 160 (BoJ relief) | 160 = BoJ intervention level | Hot NFP = back to 161+. Risk. |
| AUD/USD | 0.7134 | Mixed | 0.72 = medium-term target | Crude drop a negative. Dollar weak a positive. |
DXY Below 100: Why This Level Matters
The Dollar Index sitting at 99.21 — below the psychologically and technically important 100 level — represents a meaningful statement from currency markets. Round numbers in currencies attract institutional attention because they are the levels around which algorithmic and systematic strategies cluster their entries and exits. Below 100, the path of least resistance for the dollar is lower, unless something changes the fundamental rate expectation.
What is driving dollar weakness? Three things. First, the disinflation narrative has quietly gained traction — crude falling 3% today is a direct downward inflation input. Second, AAII bears at 41.9% and a broadly cautious retail investor base means safe-haven demand for US assets is already partially priced. Third, the Iran de-escalation removes a demand for dollar-denominated energy contracts, reducing one structural support for DXY.
EUR/USD at 1.1613: Euro Strength Has Legs
EUR/USD at 1.1613 is a genuine multi-month high relative to where this pair was trading when European energy prices were at their worst and the ECB was playing catch-up. Several things have aligned to support the euro here.
Positive: Eurozone inflation managing lower
ECB has more room to stay restrictive or cut slowly, maintaining rate differential appeal.
Positive: Iran de-escalation reduces European energy vulnerability
Europe was more exposed to Middle East energy disruption than the US. That risk premium on EUR is now partially removed.
Risk: Hot NFP revives Fed hawkishness
A strong US jobs print tomorrow resets the rate differential in favour of the dollar. EUR/USD would test 1.14-1.15 quickly. This is the primary near-term risk for euro bulls.
Key resistance level at 1.1650. A clean break there, supported by soft NFP, opens 1.17-1.18 as the next target. Support at 1.1550.
GBP/USD at 1.3424: Sterling Near the Key 1.35 Level
Cable at 1.3424 is one of the more interesting setups in FX right now. The pound has benefited from the broader dollar weakness story, but it has its own domestic drivers. UK gilt yields have been relatively stable, the Bank of England is in a similar “wait and watch” mode to the Fed, and UK political stability has reduced the typical discount the pound trades at relative to other G10 currencies.
The 1.35 level is a significant technical reference. It marks a structural high from last year and is where a cluster of option barriers sits. If NFP tomorrow is soft, cable could test 1.35 in the New York session. A hot NFP could push it back toward 1.32-1.33 within hours. The range of outcomes is wider than usual given both the NFP uncertainty and the AVGO risk premium in the broader market.
USD/JPY at 159.81: Back Below 160 — BoJ on Watch
USD/JPY pulling back below 160 gives the Bank of Japan temporary breathing room. Japanese officials had flagged 160 as an area of concern for potential intervention. Today’s move back to 159.81 is a small reprieve, but the underlying pressure has not changed.
| Level | Significance | BoJ Reaction |
|---|---|---|
| Below 158 | Dollar weakness dominant. Yen relief rally. | No intervention needed. |
| 158-160 | Watch zone. Current territory (159.81). | Verbal warnings possible. |
| 160-162 | High alert. Intervention risk elevated. | Active FX intervention probable. |
| Above 162 | Emergency territory. Structural yen weakness. | Emergency rate policy review possible. |
A hot NFP tomorrow that lifts US Treasury yields would push USD/JPY back toward 161+, putting immediate pressure on BoJ to respond. This is the highest-consequence FX scenario tomorrow morning.
AUD/USD at 0.7134: The Crude-Dollar Crossfire
The Australian dollar finds itself caught between two opposing forces today. Dollar weakness (DXY -0.32%) is a tailwind for AUD/USD, since a weaker dollar makes commodity-linked currencies relatively more attractive. But crude oil falling 3% is a headwind — Australia is a commodities exporter and crude prices influence risk appetite for high-beta currencies like AUD.
The net result at 0.7134 is broadly flat to marginally positive, which is the logical outcome when these two forces partially cancel each other out. Gold at $4,507 is a positive for Australia given its gold mining exports, but the crude drop dominates the commodity story. If NFP is soft and the dollar weakens further, AUD/USD has a path to 0.72. A hot NFP and broad risk-off could push it to 0.70.
NFP FX Scenarios — How Each Pair Moves
| Pair | Soft NFP (<150K) | In-Line (150-200K) | Hot NFP (>200K) |
|---|---|---|---|
| DXY | 97-98 | 99-100 range | 101-102 |
| EUR/USD | 1.17+ | 1.16-1.165 | 1.14-1.15 |
| GBP/USD | 1.35+ | 1.34-1.345 | 1.32-1.33 |
| USD/JPY | 157-158 (yen rallies) | 159-160 range | 161+ (intervention risk) |
| AUD/USD | 0.72+ | 0.71-0.715 | 0.70 |
FX Summary
The FX market has delivered a clear verdict heading into NFP: the dollar is weak, euro and sterling are firm, and yen is watching the 160 line. Tomorrow morning’s payrolls print is the single most important catalyst for every one of these pairs. The magnitude of potential moves — as large as 200 pips in EUR/USD or 300 pips in cable — means FX volatility could be the defining story of the Friday session, with or without the AVGO semiconductor overhang.
Related reads: Post 10 (Basis Edge — dollar and gold basis), Post 13 (Raw Materials — gold benefiting from dollar weakness). This analysis is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice.
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