Dollar Softens as Cooler PPI and Weak Retail Control Hit at 8:30 ET; EUR/USD Tests Key Resistance, Stocks Mixed
The US dollar eased after a softer inflation print and a surprise dip in the retail sales control group signaled cooling demand, nudging Treasury yields lower and lifting major FX pairs against the greenback. The producer price index came in as expected to slightly softer, while the retail control group fell 0.1% versus a 0.3% increase expected—an input that directly feeds into GDP tracking.
FX Moves: Euro and Sterling Advance, Yen Firms – EUR/USD spiked to 1.1561 before stalling just shy of clustered resistance near 1.1566–1.1567, where the 200-hour moving average aligns with the 38.2% retracement of the October high to November low. The pair has since eased back toward a nearby pivot band at 1.1541–1.1546 as traders assess follow-through on the data-led move. – GBP/USD extended gains to 1.3159, breaking above a noted swing zone at 1.31329–1.3143. The 200-hour moving average at 1.31222 now acts as initial support, while bulls eye 1.31855—the 38.2% retracement of the decline from the October 17 high—as the next trigger to deepen the bullish bias. – USD/JPY slid to 156.04, approaching a key confluence around 155.94 where the rising 200-hour moving average aligns with the 38.2% retracement of the November rally. A sustained break below that area would imply a more meaningful shift in near-term momentum.
Rates: Yield Curve Edges Lower on Softer Data Treasury yields dipped across the curve as the inflation and spending mix supported a modest bid for duration: – 2-year: 3.485%, down 0.5 bps – 5-year: 3.591%, down 1.4 bps – 10-year: 4.015%, down 2.1 bps – 30-year: 4.653%, down 2.4 bps
Yield dynamics reflect a slight tempering of growth and inflation expectations following the morning’s economic prints, with rates markets leaning cautiously dovish at the margin. FX volatility ticked higher as positioning adjusted to the softer control group reading and benign PPI.
Equities: Indices Mixed, Chip Stocks Diverge US stocks showed a mixed tone as risk appetite moderated with growth-sensitive tech under pressure: – Dow +45 points – S&P 500 flat – Nasdaq -36 points
Semiconductors were bifurcated, with Nvidia down 4.69%, AMD off 6.65%, and Micron lower by 1.85%, while Broadcom advanced 3.53%. Among megacap tech, Alphabet gained 3.86% and Microsoft slipped 0.62%. The sector’s dispersion underscores shifting market positioning and earnings sensitivities within high-beta names, even as broader liquidity flows remain steady.
What It Means for Monetary Policy Today’s cooler producer prices and weaker retail control group temper immediate inflation concerns and hint at softer consumption momentum into quarter-end. While a single set of prints won’t reset the Federal Reserve’s reaction function, the combination of easing yields and a softer dollar suggests traders are incrementally pricing less inflation persistence and a modestly improved backdrop for risk assets—provided upcoming data do not re-accelerate.
Market Highlights – USD broadly softer after PPI and retail control miss; EUR/USD capped near 1.1566–1.1567 resistance – GBP/USD targets 1.31855 as key upside marker; 1.31222 now near-term support – USD/JPY tests 156.04 with 155.94 as critical support confluence (200-hour MA/38.2% retracement) – US yields drift lower across the curve; 10-year at 4.015% – Chip stocks split: Nvidia and AMD lower, Broadcom higher; Alphabet gains, Microsoft dips
Questions and Answers Q: Why does the retail sales control group matter? A: It strips out autos, gasoline, building materials, and food services, feeding directly into personal consumption within GDP. A 0.1% decline suggests softer real activity momentum.
Q: How did the data affect Fed expectations? A: Softer PPI and a weaker control group modestly reduce inflation and growth concerns, nudging yields lower and incrementally supporting a more dovish market narrative, though the policy path remains data-dependent.
Q: What are the critical FX levels to watch? A: EUR/USD near 1.1566–1.1567 (200-hour MA/38.2% retracement), GBP/USD at 1.31855 for bullish confirmation, and USD/JPY around 155.94 as pivotal support.
Q: What could shift risk appetite next? A: Upcoming inflation releases, consumer and labor-market data, and any changes in earnings guidance for large-cap tech and semiconductors will be key catalysts for liquidity flows and market positioning.
This article was prepared by the newsroom team at BPayNews.






