The dollar moved before anyone signed anything, which is how fast the market wants this Iran war to end. A Thursday morning report said US and Iranian negotiators reached an agreement to extend the current ceasefire for 60 days, but President Trump has not approved it yet, and Iran hasn't officially confirmed.
The currency market didn't wait.
The Move
The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index dropped 0.2% by 11 a.m. in New York, reversing an earlier rally driven by overnight clashes between the two sides. The euro pushed above $1.1650.
The Swedish krona and the New Zealand dollar both led gains across the G-10, since both are considered risk-on currencies that gain when investors feel calmer. The dollar usually goes the other way.
The setup is classic dollar behavior, where investors buy the US currency when they're nervous because it's the safest asset on the planet. When the world feels less likely to blow up, they sell some of it back and buy higher-yielding currencies somewhere else.
A peace headline does the same job as a calm-down headline for bond yields, which is why the dollar reaction lined up with what Treasuries did at the same time.
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What's In The Deal
The reported memorandum of understanding extends a ceasefire that's been in place since early April, and it also restarts negotiations on Iran's nuclear program. The talks are the same ones that fell apart before the war started three months ago.
What it's not, yet, is a signed peace deal, since Trump has the final call on the US side, and his approval has not landed. Iran also hasn't confirmed publicly.
The framework exists, but the signatures don't. This is like waiting for a quote to clear before believing your insurance went through, where the paperwork looks done, but it doesn't count until someone signs.
That gap is also why portfolio hedges like Treasuries and TIPS tend to hold their bid even on ceasefire days. Investors don't fully unwind until the headlines turn into ink.
What To Watch
Two things will tell investors whether this dollar move sticks, starting with Trump's response on the deal. If he kills it, the dollar gets bid right back up.
The other is what oil does, because crude has been the cleanest barometer of how seriously markets are taking the conflict, and any extension that holds should send it lower.
For now, currencies are betting on calm.
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