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Fed Hike Bets Send The Dollar To Its Best Week Since March

Published May 16, 2026
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Summary:
  • The US Dollar Index is on pace to gain more than 1% this week, its biggest move since early March.
  • Markets now price a 44% chance the Fed hikes rates in December, up from 22.5% a week ago.
  • A 6% Producer Price Index reading, the biggest annual jump since late 2022, flipped the rate narrative.

For most of 2026, investors were lined up on one side of the trade: rate cuts are coming and the dollar is heading lower. This week's hot inflation print blew that up, and the dollar is now having its best week in two months while most of Wall Street rewrites its 2026 playbook.

Why The Dollar Just Snapped Higher

The Producer Price Index, a key inflation gauge, came in at 6% in April, its highest annual reading since December 2022.

PPI is the price businesses pay before passing costs to shoppers, and it's the early warning system for the inflation that shows up at the checkout line later.

Retail sales and jobs data also held up this month, and the Middle East conflict has not pushed the US economy off course the way many strategists feared in early spring.

Put it all together and the soft-landing story looks more like a no-landing story, where growth keeps running and inflation refuses to cool.

The US Dollar Index, which tracks the dollar against a basket of major currencies, rose to a two-week high and is up more than 1% for the week.

Every morning, Market Briefs breaks down what moves like this actually mean for your portfolio in five minutes a day, with a free investing masterclass thrown in when you join.

The Fed Math Just Changed

A week ago, futures markets priced just a 22.5% chance the Fed hikes rates at its December meeting, and as of Friday those odds sit at 44%, per the CME FedWatch tool.

That's a big swing in seven days, and it explains the dollar's run.

When rates head higher, the dollar acts like a magnet that pulls global money toward US bonds and out of other currencies.

For investors holding US stocks, a stronger dollar is a mixed bag, since it helps importers and shoppers while hurting US firms that earn money overseas and then turn it back into dollars.

The Knock-On Effects

The dollar's surge is already rippling across markets.

Emerging market currencies have weakened against the dollar this week, which makes dollar-priced commodities like oil more costly for buyers using local money.

Gold, which spent much of 2026 climbing on the rate-cut story, has slipped as the higher-rate story took over.

For US exporters, the big tech and industrial names that earn a huge chunk of revenue overseas, every dollar uptick chips away at quarterly earnings when foreign sales come back home.

Bond yields also climbed this week, with the 10-year Treasury pushing higher as traders priced in a longer hold on rates.

What To Watch

The next inflation reports are the only thing that matters now.

One soft read and December hike odds slide back below 30%, but one more hot print and the dollar's run has room to keep going.

Traders will also watch the Fed's November speeches for any pushback on the new market pricing, since policymakers tend to guide expectations ahead of meetings.

The Fed's December meeting is the real test.

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