USD/CHF (USDCHF) is down 0.51% at Jul 2 04:20(ET), now at $0.80497, with a 7-day down of 0.54%.

The decline in the USDCHF currency pair was primarily driven by a broader realignment of global macroeconomic expectations and shifting monetary policy dynamics between the Federal Reserve and the Swiss National Bank.
A major catalyst for the downward pressure on the US dollar was a string of cooling indicators from the United States labor market. A softer-than-expected June ADP private employment report on the eve of the highly anticipated non-farm payrolls release dented market conviction regarding the Federal Reserve’s hawkish monetary policy path. Remarks from Federal Reserve officials indicating that inflation risks had diminished further tempered aggressive interest rate hike bets. This moderation in Federal Reserve rate expectations triggered a pullback in US Treasury yields and prompted institutional investors to scale back long-dollar positions, directly undercutting the base currency.
On the other side of the pair, Swiss macroeconomic indicators provided a complex backdrop that ultimately favored a stronger Swiss franc. June consumer price index data from Switzerland revealed that headline inflation slowed slightly to 0.5% year-on-year, while core inflation held steady. Although the benign inflation outlook practically confirms that the Swiss National Bank will keep its benchmark policy rate on hold at 0% for the foreseeable future, the figures also indicated that domestic price pressures remain highly stable compared to other major economies. With the Swiss National Bank maintaining its "heightened willingness" to intervene in the foreign exchange market, the downside risk for the franc was kept in check.
Additionally, international capital flows and broader risk dynamics supported the safe-haven Swiss franc. A retreat in global crude oil prices eased external inflationary pressures, which concurrently helped lower global bond yields and reduced the relative yield advantage of the US dollar. Despite the Swiss National Bank keeping rates anchored at zero, the unwinding of long-dollar momentum, combined with technical resistance as the USDCHF pair failed to breach major multi-month highs near the 0.8125 level, triggered a wave of technical selling. This confluence of softer US economic signals, stabilizing Swiss inflation, and technical unwinding led to the intraday appreciation of the Swiss franc against the greenback.
Technically, USD/CHF (USDCHF) shows a MACD (12,26,9) value of -0.000, indicating a neutral signal. The RSI at 58.057 suggests neutral condition and the Williams %R at 38.153 suggests buy condition. Please monitor closely.

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