
By Chuck Mikolajczak
NEW YORK, June 23 (Reuters) – The U.S. dollar rose to its highest level in more than a year on Tuesday as markets adjusted expectations for a more hawkish stance from the Federal Reserve, while a selloff in megacap stocks also buoyed the greenback.
The Fed’s policy meeting last week, and first under new Chairman Kevin Warsh, was largely seen as hawkish by market participants, and expectations for rate hikes this year from the central bank have been increasing since the announcement, even as oil prices have ebbed and eased some inflation concerns.
Expectations for a hike from the Fed of at least 25 basis points at its July meeting are at 34.2%, up from 8.5% a week ago, according to CME FedWatch, while markets are pricing in a 69.5% chance of a hike at the September meeting, up from 29.1% a week earlier.
“The dollar’s strength right now, at the end of the day, it’s still hawkishness, if you look at Fed expectations with Fed funds futures right now, they are some of the highest odds that we’ve seen in a while,” said Eugene Epstein, head of trading and structured products at Moneycorp in Stamford, Connecticut.
“At the end of the day, you have to boil it down to rates, and the rates markets are expecting much more hawkishness in the near term than they had been before, and the entire market is adjusting to it. Equities are adjusting to it, gold is adjusting to it, the dollar is adjusting to it.”
U.S. stocks were lower in the early stages of trading, with the Nasdaq taking the brunt of the declines.
The dollar index, which measures the greenback against a basket of currencies, rose 0.36% to 101.37 after hitting its highest since May 2025 at 101.38, with the euro down 0.44% at $1.1377 after hitting $1.1374, its lowest since June 2025.
Kit Juckes, chief FX strategist at Societe Generale, said in a note that rate differentials could be enough to push the euro through $1.14 as “for once, the U.S. has both a stronger economy than the euro zone and a rates market that prices in more Fed tightening than ECB tightening in the coming months.”
Chicago Federal Reserve President Austan Goolsbee said late on Monday that with the labor market stable, he is focused on figuring out whether too-high inflation will stay that way or if it will recede as the effect of high tariffs fades and if the conflict in the Middle East gets resolved.
Euro zone inflation could stay above the European Central Bank’s 2% target for some time, even if peace in the Middle East holds, but this shock still only requires a measured policy response, ECB Chief Economist Philip Lane said.



