Short-term FX direction hinges on credible de-escalation signals, with Hormuz acting as the key pivot for sentiment.
I do not know about you, but I woke up today with that familiar throb behind the eyes, the kind you get when volatility and policy collide and leave you sorting through the wreckage the morning after. Oil delivered the punch, central banks poured the drinks, and now FX is left trying to piece together what actually matters and what was just noise amplified by adrenaline.
The first thing that stands out is how quickly the narrative flipped. Not long ago, Powell was setting the tone, leaning just hawkish enough to keep the dollar supported. But that signal has been drowned out by a louder chorus overseas. The ECB is now openly flirting with an April move, and the Bank of England, even with its hold, delivered a message wrapped in unanimity that felt far tighter than the label suggests. When the most cautious voices start sounding less cautious, the market does not debate it; it reprices it.
The result is a dollar that suddenly looks less like the anchor of the system and more like a passenger adjusting to someone else at the wheel. This is not about the Fed turning soft. It is about relative conviction shifting. When Europe and the UK start moving from hesitation to preemption, the dollar loses its rate advantage not in absolute terms but in perception, and perception is what trades.
But step back, and it becomes clear that this is not really a central bank story at all. It is an oil story wearing a policy mask.
Crude is still the metronome. It surged, it snapped back, and in doing so it dragged the entire macro complex with it. Brent flirting with $119 before sliding back toward $107 was not just volatility; it was the market running a live simulation of disruption and then partially pricing in relief. The catalyst for that relief, talk of reopening Hormuz and a faster end to hostilities, was enough to take the edge off but not enough to reset the system.
That distinction matters.
Because even as prices pulled back, the psychological imprint remains. Energy markets do not need to stay at the highs to drive behavior. They only need to remind participants how fragile the supply chain has become. Once that realization is embedded, every asset class starts trading with one eye on the next headline and the other on positioning.
That is why the dollar sold off harder than the move in oil might justify on paper. The market is not just trading spot levels; it is trading the probability distribution of outcomes. A hint of de-escalation compresses the right tail, and suddenly the dollar loses its fear premium faster than it gained it.
At the same time, Europe's rate story is no longer theoretical. Bringing April into play changes the tempo. It signals a central bank willing to move before the data fully confirms the risk, and that kind of posture tends to pull forward expectations across the curve. The euro is picking up that signal but it is doing so on unstable ground.
Because energy has not stepped aside. Gas flows remain uncertain, supply shocks are still echoing through the system, and the damage to LNG infrastructure is not something that reverses with a headline. It lingers, quietly tightening the backdrop even as front-end prices ease.
That is where the tension sits.
On one side, you have a more assertive ECB and a Bank of England that is no longer leaning comfortably dovish. On the other, you have an energy complex that continues to dictate financial conditions in a way that rate guidance simply cannot override. The euro can push higher on policy repricing but it is still trading with a ceiling defined by energy vulnerability.
In that sense, FX right now feels less like a clean macro trade and more like a balancing act across shifting fault lines. Rates are moving but they are moving in response to commodities. Currencies are reacting but they are reacting to second-order effects.
And hovering over all of it is the same question the market keeps coming back to: is this de-escalation real or just a pause between chapters.
If the path toward reopening Hormuz becomes credible, the dollar likely extends lower as the fear premium continues to bleed out. If that clarity fails to materialize, the rebound could be just as sharp because the market has already started to lean the other way.
That is the game. Not direction but conviction.
Right now, conviction is thin; positioning is reactive; and the entire system is still taking its cues from a barrel of oil that refuses to sit still.