On November 25th, non-US currencies rose at the beginning of the New Zealand trading session, with the US dollar against the Japanese yen USD/JPY at 154.40 and closing at 154.78 on Friday; the British pound against the US dollar GBP/USD at 1.2585 and closing at 1.2523 on Friday; the US dollar against the Swiss franc USD/CHF at 0.8922 and closing at 0.8942 on Friday; the euro against the US dollar EUR/USD at 1.0469 and closing at 1.0417 on Friday.
On November 14th, the US dollar index DXY stood at 107, setting a new high since November 2023. A number of non-US currencies fell by about 0.5% during the day, with the pound against the US dollar GBP/USD trading at 1.2643, the euro against the US dollar EUR/USD trading at 1.0511, and the Australian dollar against the US dollar AUD/USD trading at 0.6455.
After the United States released the preliminary data, non-US currencies generally rose, the euro against the dollar EUR/USD rose 20 points in the short term, at 1.0751; the pound against the dollar GBP/USD rose 30 points in the short term, at 1.2501; the dollar against the yen USD/JPY fell 20 points in the short term, at 155.69.
Non-US currencies generally rose, with the pound against the dollar GBP/USD rising by 0.50% in the day and rising by nearly 50 points in the short term; the euro against the dollar EUR/USD rose by more than 40 points in the short term, and the dollar against the yen USD/JPY fell by 25 points.