USD/CHF fell 0.80% to $0.80738 on July 14 after softer US inflation data pushed traders to reprice Federal Reserve rate expectations. Cooling Treasury yields narrowed the dollar’s advantage over the Swiss Franc, while safe-haven demand and unwinding carry trades added pressure.
USD/CHF dropped 0.80% to $0.80738 by 08:35 ET on July 14, according to TradingKey. The slide traces back to a sharp repricing of Federal Reserve rate expectations after a softer-than-anticipated US inflation print.
Cooling yields erode the dollar’s edge
A cooler consumer price index reading triggered a broad retreat in US Treasury yields, especially at the front end of the curve. That move narrowed the interest rate differential between the US Dollar and the Swiss Franc, stripping away the yield support that had backed the greenback. As investors leaned toward a narrative of an accelerated Fed easing cycle, the dollar lost ground.
The Swiss Franc, meanwhile, drew stronger safe-haven demand. Renewed geopolitical tensions and concerns over fiscal stability in major developed economies prompted a rotation into high-quality, low-beta assets, and the Franc remains a primary beneficiary of that risk-off sentiment. The Swiss National Bank’s perceived shift toward prioritizing price stability over currency devaluation has also reduced the risk of immediate intervention, encouraging traders to add Franc exposure.
Carry trades unwind
The decline also reflects a broader unwinding of carry trades. With US yields compressing and the Franc showing strong momentum, the risk-adjusted returns for holding short-Franc positions have deteriorated, prompting a wave of speculative position squaring. Switzerland’s lower domestic inflation relative to its G10 peers further supports the currency as real interest rate differentials move in its favor.
What traders are watching
On the charts, TradingKey reports a MACD (12,26,9) value of -0.001, an RSI at 55.492, and a Williams %R at 55.328 — a mostly neutral technical picture. The market is now pricing in a period of policy divergence, with the Fed expected to react to slowing growth and cooling inflation while the SNB holds a more neutral stance.
Source: TradingKey
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