USD/CHF (USDCHF) is up 0.60% at Jun 17 14:35(ET), now at $0.79743, with a 7-day down of 0.20%.

The advance in the USDCHF pair was primarily catalyzed by a hawkish policy pivot from the Federal Reserve during Kevin Warsh’s debut meeting as Chairman, coupled with growing policy divergence ahead of the Swiss National Bank’s upcoming interest-rate decision.
At its June meeting, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) held the federal funds rate steady at 3.50% to 3.75%. However, the accompanying Summary of Economic Projections delivered a significant hawkish surprise, revealing that nine policymakers now expect a rate hike by the end of 2026. This represents a complete turnaround from the central bank's previous projections, which had penciled in rate cuts for the year. This hawkish shift was further reinforced by the deletion of forward guidance language regarding future rate reductions from the policy statement. The removal of this easing bias, in line with Chairman Warsh’s preferred communication style, immediately pushed US Treasury yields higher and fueled broad-based US dollar strength.
On the other side of the pair, the Swiss Franc came under selling pressure as market participants anticipated a widening interest-rate differential. The Swiss National Bank is widely expected to maintain its policy rate at 0%. Subdued Swiss inflation, coupled with a decline in producer and import prices, has kept the central bank comfortably on hold. With the Fed signaling a potential rate hike later this year and the Swiss National Bank expected to hold steady at zero, the stark contrast between a tightening Fed and a neutral European counterpart significantly diminished the relative appeal of the franc.
Furthermore, a shift in risk sentiment played a crucial role in the Swiss currency’s underperformance. Recent progress toward an interim agreement between the United States and Iran has cooled geopolitical anxieties. The subsequent reduction in geopolitical risk premium triggered a sharp drop in crude oil prices and directly dented safe-haven demand for the Swiss Franc, encouraging capital outflows from defensive assets and back into the higher-yielding US Dollar.
The upward trajectory of USDCHF is supported by a fundamental realignment of interest-rate expectations. While the relief in geopolitical tensions might provide temporary shifts, the widening policy and yield divergence between the Federal Reserve and the Swiss National Bank supports a broader macroeconomic trend of dollar appreciation against the franc.
Technically, USD/CHF (USDCHF) shows a MACD (12,26,9) value of 0.001, indicating a buy signal. The RSI at 59.172 suggests neutral condition and the Williams %R at 21.993 suggests buy condition. Please monitor closely.

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