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  • USD/CHF falls as the US Dollar struggles on easing risk aversion after Israel and Lebanon renewed their ceasefire on Wednesday.
  • The Greenback may regain its ground as strong May jobs data fuels expectations that the Fed will raise interest rates.
  • Schlegel said recently that the SNB is ready to intervene against Middle East-driven Swiss Franc overvaluation pressures.

USD/CHF halts its three-day winning streak, trading around 0.7910 during the Asian hours on Thursday. The pair depreciates as the US Dollar (USD) loses ground on easingย risk aversionย following theย newsย that Israel and Lebanon on Wednesday agreed to renew a ceasefire. However, it would require a “complete cessation” of fire by Iran-backed Hezbollah. The agreement was announced in a joint statement after US-led talks in Washington.

The Israel and Lebanon do not have formal diplomatic relations, though also agreed to establish several โ€œpilot security zones” in which the Lebanese armed forces “will take exclusive control of the territory to the exclusion of all non-state actors.”

The downside ofย the USD/CHF pairย could be restrained as the Greenback may regain its ground amid rising expectations that the US Federal Reserve (Fed) will raise interest rates this year. Stronger-than-expected US jobs data, including the May ADP private payrolls and JOLTS job openings, suggested a resilient US labor market. These reports might prompt traders to raise their bets that the Fed will keep interestย ratesย higher for longer.

Market expectations have shifted dramatically as the war in Iran continues to disrupt energy markets, driving up oil prices and fueling inflation. Consequently, traders are adjusting to a more hawkishย outlook, with the CME FedWatch Tool now pricing in a nearly 42% probability of aย Federal Reserveย interest-rate hike in December.

Swiss National Bank (SNB) Chairman Martin Schlegel noted that the Swiss Francโ€™s real overvaluation is notably lower than its nominal overvaluation. Schlegel added that the central bank has increased its readiness to intervene in the foreign exchange market to counter safe-haven appreciation pressures driven by escalating tensions in the Middle East.

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