The dollar index held near a two-month high as escalating Gulf hostilities boosted oil prices and reduced risk appetite. The Japanese yen hovered near the critical 160 yen per dollar level, a threshold that has previously prompted intervention warnings. Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda signaled a high chance of a rate hike this month.

The dollar held near a two-month high on Thursday as escalating Gulf hostilities pushed oil prices higher and reduced risk appetite. The Japanese yen was trading near the critical 160 yen per dollar level, a threshold that has previously prompted intervention warnings from authorities. The dollar index, measuring the greenback against a basket of currencies, was slightly higher at 99.47, having reached its strongest point since April 7 in the prior session. Analysts suggest the dollar's safe-haven status is strengthening due to geopolitical tensions. Meanwhile, a survey indicated that prices paid by U.S. services businesses surged last month, reinforcing expectations that the Federal Reserve will maintain current interest rates for an extended period. Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda's comments suggested a high probability of an interest rate hike this month if inflationary risks outweigh economic downside risks. Bitcoin and Ether both slid to four-month lows.
Geopolitical tensions are boosting the dollar's safe-haven appeal, while the Bank of Japan's potential rate hike signals a shift in monetary policy, impacting global currency markets and risk assets like Bitcoin.