Wall Street’s FX Roadmap Roiled by Dollar’s Best Run Since July

The dollar is on track for its best month since July as the conflict in the Middle East scrambles Wall Street’s playbook for the world’s dominant reserve currency.

The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index is up about 2.6% in March, buoyed by haven flows and diminished expectations for Federal Reserve interest-rate cuts after the war caused energy prices to soar.

It marks a sharp reversal for the greenback, which on the eve of the conflict had just logged its fourth straight losing month. As the hostilities drag on, it’s ramping up pressure on banks and investors who’ve had a dim view of the currency’s prospects.

JPMorgan Chase & Co. strategists, for example, turned bullish for the first time in a year. In the futures market, speculators flipped to betting on greenback gains, whereas in mid-February they were the most bearish in about five years.

“The short dollar positions of early 2026 were caught offsides,” said Steven Englander, head of G-10 foreign-exchange research at Standard Chartered Bank.



With traders dumping short bets and energy prices elevated, Englander is sticking to his forecast for further dollar gains, which he held coming into 2026. He sees it reaching about $1.12 per euro by year-end, its strongest since May, from around $1.15 now.