Dollar Jumps as Fed Faces December Decision Without Fresh Jobs Data
The US dollar is out in front to start the North American session as forex markets recalibrate Federal Reserve expectations. With the Bureau of Labor Statistics postponing the November payrolls release to December 16—after the December 10 FOMC meeting—traders see a lower likelihood of policy changes without fresh labor data. Today’s September jobs print is viewed as backward-looking, leaving price action and technicals to guide near-term moves in EURUSD, USDJPY, and GBPUSD as key swing levels define trend bias.
Equities are firmer on renewed AI optimism after Nvidia delivered another round of standout earnings and upbeat guidance. The “Nvidia effect” is rippling across semiconductors and megacaps, with pre-market gains led by Super Micro Computer, AMD, Palantir, Broadcom, Oracle, and others. Nvidia shares are up about 5% to $195.88, eyeing the October peak near $213. US stock futures point higher, with the Dow, S&P 500, and Nasdaq all set for strong openings.
Rates and commodities show a modest risk-on tilt. Treasury yields are edging up across the curve, with the 2-year near 3.61% and the 10-year around 4.14%. Crude oil is recovering after yesterday’s sharp drop, up roughly $0.66 to $59.92 amid shifting geopolitical headlines. The data calendar features initial jobless claims (consensus 230K), continuing claims (1.951 million), the Philadelphia Fed business index (expected to turn positive to 2.0 from -12.8), and Canada’s October PPI (seen at 0.3% m/m).
Key Points – US dollar strengthens as markets price in a cautious Fed due to the delayed November jobs report – September payrolls seen as old news; FX focus shifts to technical levels in EURUSD, USDJPY, and GBPUSD – Nvidia’s earnings and guidance reignite the AI trade; tech and semiconductor stocks rally pre-market – US stock futures rise sharply; Dow, S&P 500, and Nasdaq all set for higher opens – Treasury yields firm across the curve; crude oil rebounds to about $59.92 – Today’s data: US jobless claims, Philadelphia Fed index, and Canada PPI






