💹 Dollar Gently Rebounds in a Quiet Holiday Market

💹 Dollar Gently Rebounds in a Quiet Holiday Market

— With the U.S. shut for Thanksgiving, FX moves are dominated by position-adjustments. USD/JPY drifts lower with a heavy top.


【1】Thanksgiving Shuts Down U.S. Markets — Expect an Ultra-Quiet Session

Today’s central theme is simple:

U.S. markets are fully closed for Thanksgiving.

Stocks and bonds are shut, and tomorrow’s Black Friday will be a shortened session—effectively leaving U.S. traders absent for the rest of the week.

Most key data were front-loaded earlier this week, meaning:

  • Thin liquidity

  • Flow-driven moves

  • Susceptibility to headline noise

A textbook holiday market.


【2】The “Rate-Cut Trade” That Drove Dollar Weakness Remains Intact

USD softness earlier this week was driven by several overlapping factors:

  • December rate-cut odds remain elevated at ~85% (CME)

  • AUD and NZD strength exposed the dollar’s relative weakness

  • U.K. fiscal optimism boosted GBP buying

  • European currencies held firm against the dollar

The structural backdrop for USD selling remains, even if today’s flow is dominated by consolidation.


【3】EUR Stuck in Choppy Range — Conflicting Forces in Play

This week’s EUR price action has been messy due to mixed signals:

Bullish factors

  • Expectations that the ECB is done with early rate-cut pricing

Bearish factors

  • Reversal flow after the sharp GBP rally

Result: EUR/USD is stuck in short-term, trendless swings, with neither side gaining control.


【4】USD/JPY: Heavy Above 158, Sliding After the Test

After probing 158, USD/JPY quickly hit a ceiling.

Reasons include:

  • Re-emergence of BoJ December rate-hike speculation

  • Intervention concerns at elevated levels

  • Political pressure as labor unions warn “weak yen erodes wage gains”

  • Persistent U.S. rate-cut expectations

In short: “Yen selling is no longer a one-way trade.”

However:

  • Yen carry demand remains strong

  • Dips into the 155s continue to attract buyers

Meaning: Deep declines are unlikely, but the pair faces mild downward pressure.


【5】London Session: Mild Dollar Rebound, GBP Under Pressure

Dollar Index

  • Tokyo: dipped to the 99.40s

  • London: rebounded to the 99.70s

A natural reaction after days of USD selling as European traders booked some profits.

GBP

After surging on the Autumn Budget news, GBP faced significant corrective selling today.

  • GBP/USD dropped to 1.3210

EUR/USD

Pulled lower by GBP weakness, slipping toward 1.1580.

USD/JPY

  • Tokyo low: 155.73

  • Recovered to 156.30–40 in London
    Stable compared to other FX moves.


【6】A Europe-Driven Day — Zero U.S. Data

With the U.S. offline, today’s market drivers come almost exclusively from Europe:

  • German GfK consumer confidence

  • Eurozone M3 money supply

  • Confidence indicators

  • Data from Turkey, South Africa, Mexico, and Canada

Though none carry the weight of U.S. releases — reaction will be limited.


【7】ECB Speakers Add Small Noise, Not Trend

  • ECB Minutes

  • Villeroy (France)

  • De Guindos (Vice President)

  • BoE’s Greene

These may cause micro-moves but are unlikely to drive major FX trends.


Summary: Dollar Rebounds Slightly, but Trend Signals Are Muted

Key takeaways:

  • U.S. market holiday → Extremely low liquidity

  • No new catalysts today

  • Rebound driven mainly by profit-taking after earlier USD weakness

  • GBP softens after its surge

  • USD/JPY reactive to headlines but unlikely to trend decisively

🎯 Today’s market theme summarized:

👉 “Low liquidity + no catalysts = a day of adjustments, not direction.”

More Insights