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Dollar jumps as Fed holds rates but projects one hike later this year

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Dollar jumps as Fed holds rates but projects one hike later this year
The dollar strengthened across the board on Wednesday after the Federal Reserve held the benchmark interest rate steady and the Fed‘s statement showed policymakers expect a hike in borrowing costs later this year amid growing concerns about inflation.

While the central bank left the policy rate in the 3.50%-3.75% range, new quarterly projections showed nine Fed officials now anticipate a rate hike by the end of 2026, and an updated policy statement removed language that had been used to flag the likelihood of further reductions in borrowing costs in 2026.

The statement, in an early sign of new Fed Chairman Kevin Warsh‘s influence, removed any guidance about future rate moves altogether, with a revised ‌format that simply stated ⁠the rate ⁠decision and reaffirmed the central bank’s intent to keep “ample reserves in the banking system.”

“This Fed decision was short, but not sweet,” Karl Schamotta, chief market strategist at Corpay in Toronto, said.

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“Kevin Warsh moved swiftly to put his stamp on the central bank’s communication strategy by executing a dramatic revision to the official statement, wiping out anything resembling forward guidance and editing out the bulk of the contextual information typically parsed most closely in financial markets.”


The Fed statement showed the outlook for inflation was marked up from 2.7% for the end of 2026 to 3.6%.
“The committee turned sharply hawkish, with the median participant yanking inflation projections much higher – suggesting that officials don’t expect this weekend’s U.S.-Iran deal to result in a serious easing in price pressures – and penciling in at least one hike this ⁠year, marking a ‌stark contrast with the cut previously expected,” Schamotta said. “Markets are taking it on the chin, with yields moving up in line with rate expectations, the dollar advancing against all of its major rivals, and equity markets tumbling,” he said.

The dollar index, which measures the greenback ⁠against a basket of currencies including the yen and the euro, rose 0.5% to 100.01, the highest in nearly a week. The euro fell 0.5% to $1.1549.

Also Read | Nasdaq, S&P fall over 1% as Fed holds rates; traders raise hike bets
Short-term U.S. interest-rate futures are now pricing in a bigger chance that the Federal Reserve will deliver a rate hike by September than opt to keep rates where they are.

An interim agreement to end the Iran war has pushed oil prices lower and should help ease some inflationary pressure in the months ahead, though the pass-through to consumer energy prices may take time.

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Warsh, appointed by President Donald Trump, has suggested he will adopt a different governing approach from his predecessor Jerome Powell, who remains a voting member of the FOMC as a governor.

The dollar showed little reaction to data released on Wednesday showing U.S. retail sales increased more than expected in May.

BOE AND BOJ

The Bank of England meets on Thursday and, ‌as with the Fed, no change in policy is expected, leaving the focus on the tone of policymakers’ commentary.

That commentary could be shaped in part by Wednesday’s UK inflation data, which showed inflation unexpectedly held at 2.8% in May, unchanged from the 13-month low reached in April. Markets currently see one BoE rate hike by ⁠year-end.

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Sterling was last down 0.5% at $1.3361.

The yen pared gains from earlier in the session to trade up about 0.05% to 160.385 per dollar, still keeping traders on alert for potential intervention by Japanese authorities to support the persistently weak currency.

The BOJ on Tuesday raised rates to a 31-year high in a landmark step in its policy normalization, signaling readiness to tighten further as it focuses on taming price pressures from the war-induced energy shock. However, policymakers offered few clues on the timing of the next move.

Sweden’s crown weakened after the Riksbank held its policy rate unchanged. The central bank said the Iran war had intensified inflationary pressures, raising the likelihood of a future rate hike, while also noting that underlying inflation remained subdued and economic activity was somewhat below normal.

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The Swedish crown was last down 0.8% versus the dollar at 9.4382.

Leading cryptocurrency bitcoin was about flat on the day at $65,834.

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Apple: Surprisingly Resilient, Frustratingly Expensive

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Apple: Surprisingly Resilient, Frustratingly Expensive

Apple: Surprisingly Resilient, Frustratingly Expensive

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Exclusive-Thailand revives $30 billion coast-to-coast corridor to rival Malacca Strait

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Exclusive-Thailand revives $30 billion coast-to-coast corridor to rival Malacca Strait


Exclusive-Thailand revives $30 billion coast-to-coast corridor to rival Malacca Strait

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Ryanair reaches 30 million passenger milestone at Bristol Airport

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The budget carrier launched its first flights from the South West city in 1998

A Ryanair passenger plane

A Ryanair passenger plane(Image: Peter Byrne/PA Wire)

Budget carrier Ryanair says it has reached a “significant milestone” after carrying more than 30 million passengers through Bristol Airport.

The airline launched its first flights from the city in 1998, later opening a base at the South West transport hub.

Ryanair now has five B737 aircraft based at Bristol, which it says represents a $500m investment and supports more than 1,400 local jobs.

This summer, Ryanair is operating its biggest ever schedule from Bristol, with more than 330 weekly flights across 36 routes, including a new route to Bari in Italy.

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It also flies to other sun hotspots from Bristol Airport including Malaga, Tenerife and Venice, as well as cities such as Budapest, Krakow and Madrid.

Jade Kirwan of Ryanair said: “This significant milestone showcases Ryanair’s continued investment and growth in the region – including our 5 aircraft base – delivering important low-fare connectivity, traffic, tourism, jobs, and economic growth.”

Bristol Airport’s chief executive, Dave Lees, who announced in April that he was stepping down, said: “30 million Ryanair passengers travelling through Bristol Airport is a brilliant milestone and testament to our long-standing partnership of more than 25 years, offering routes that people in the South West and Wales enjoy travelling too as well connecting many families and friends in Ireland, with relatives in the region.”

Last month, Ryanair said it was better placed to ride out the looming jet fuel crisis than its European rivals.

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The Dublin-based company revealed that 80 per cent of its jet fuel requirements for the year ahead are locked in at $67 per barrel, while current market prices continue to fluctuate – often above the $100 mark.

The blockage of the Strait of Hormuz amid the Iran conflict has pushed global jet fuel shipments to their lowest level on record, potentially forcing the cancellation of thousands of summer flights.

But Ryanair has maintained that Europe “remains well supplied” via routes through West Africa, the Americas and Norway. Despite this boss Michael O’Leary has admitted the situation has “created economic uncertainty”.

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Moscow, Kyiv exchange attacks as Ukraine’s Zelenskiy speaks to Trump, Europe

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Moscow, Kyiv exchange attacks as Ukraine’s Zelenskiy speaks to Trump, Europe


Moscow, Kyiv exchange attacks as Ukraine’s Zelenskiy speaks to Trump, Europe

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'Regime Change; At The Fed: Fed Chair Warsh Makes The First Moves

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'Regime Change; At The Fed: Fed Chair Warsh Makes The First Moves

'Regime Change; At The Fed: Fed Chair Warsh Makes The First Moves

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Japan’s Obayashi to acquire Multiplex from Brookfield for $526 mln

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Japan’s Obayashi to acquire Multiplex from Brookfield for $526 mln

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Wall Street sinks on bets Fed will hike rates in 2026

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Wall Street sinks on bets Fed will hike rates in 2026

The S&P 500 and Nasdaq closed down ‌by more than 1.0 per cent on Wednesday, as traders bet the Federal Reserve’s next move would be a rate hike.

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Hawkish Shift Opens The Door To Fed Rate Hikes

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Nearly All Monetary Rules Say The Fed Should Raise Rates

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Vodafone outage chaos before network back online

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Vodafone mobile outage hits Australian users

Millions of Vodafone customers have faced chaos after the mobile network crashed nationwide, with services only slowly returning with intermittent faults.

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Apple to raise prices as AI boom pushes up chip costs

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Apple to raise prices as AI boom pushes up chip costs

The firm’s outgoing boss Tim Cook did not say when prices will rise or which products will be affected.

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