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← Commentary feed13 May 2026, 03:21 UTC
INVESTINGLIVEEamonn Sheridan

Goldman Sachs sees broad dollar strength as energy shock keeps yields elevated

The desk is positioning for broad dollar strength against G10 currencies, particularly the Swedish krona, euro, and British pound, as elevated US yields are supported by ongoing energy price shocks. Per the full note source, Goldman Sachs highlights that persistent inflation and resilient economic growth in the US are key drivers, with the dollar benefiting from both haven flows and its status as the world's largest oil producer. This aligns with our consensus target of 1.075 for EUR/USD, suggesting that the dollar's strength could continue unless significant shifts in macroeconomic policy occur elsewhere. With no high-impact events on the calendar, market participants should remain focused on geopolitical developments and energy prices.

What the desk is arguing

Goldman Sachs sees the ongoing energy price shock sustaining higher US yields and driving broad dollar strength across G10 currencies. The bank's preferred positions are long USD against the Swedish krona, euro, and British pound, citing the US' insulation as a top oil producer.

The thesis rests on persistent inflation and resilient US growth, which have already produced higher-for-longer yields. Any prolongation of the energy shock reinforces the dollar's terms-of-trade advantage, with haven flows adding support since late February's geopolitical events.

Implicitly, Goldman is rejecting the view that yield differentials have peaked or that the Fed will cut rates soon. They also counter the notion that FX intervention in Japan can stem yen weakness without macro policy adjustment.

Where it sits in our coverage

Our internal consensus target for EUR/USD stands at 1.075 (Dec-26), with a range of 1.04–1.12. This aligns with Goldman's bearish euro view, as our target implies further downside from current levels near 1.10.

Specific firm targets: - JPMorgan: 1.10 (Mar-26) – aligned, but less aggressive than Goldman. - Barclays: 1.07 (Dec-26) – aligned, similar magnitude. - BofA: 1.04 (Dec-26) – aligned, more bearish.

No contrary firm targets were cited for EUR/USD.

How other firms see it

The consensus broadly aligns with Goldman's dollar bullishness. JPMorgan also favors dollar strength on energy disruption, while Barclays echoes higher-for-longer yields.

A contrary view comes from BofA, which sees the Fed cutting by H2 2026, capping dollar upside. However, this is a minority stance given the current macro setup.

How firms align with this view

consensus1.0750range1.04001.1200

Aligned with the desk view

Key takeaways

  • 01Goldman Sachs advocates long USD positions against SEK, EUR, and GBP, citing energy-driven yield support.
  • 02The bank expects yen weakness to persist absent domestic macro policy changes.
  • 03Our internal EUR/USD target (1.075) aligns with Goldman's bearish euro view.

Market implications

Renewed USD strength likely, particularly vs European currencies and SEK. EUR/USD may test our range low (1.04) if energy shock persists. USD/JPY could push higher if intervention fails. Risk-on currencies may underperform.

Risks to this view

A rapid de-escalation in geopolitical tensions could reverse haven flows and weigh on USD. Fed pivot to dovishness or a sharp slowdown in US growth would undermine the higher-yield narrative. Sustained FX intervention by Japan could temporarily cap yen weakness.

Goldman Sachs says the energy price shock will keep US yields elevated and drive broad dollar strength across G10, with favoured longs against the krona, euro and pound. Summary: Goldman Sachs strategists said the combination of rising inflation and resilient economic growth has already produced higher-for-longer US yields, with any prolonged energy shock set to reinforce broad dollar strength across G10 currencies Goldman's preferred positions include long dollar against the Swedish krona, euro and British pound The dollar has drawn support from haven flows since the US and Israeli attack on Iran in late February disrupted energy markets, with the US position as the world's largest oil producer adding further insulation from the energy shock Goldman noted that sustained foreign exchange intervention is difficult to maintain without a corresponding shift in domestic macro policy, and that no such shift appears imminent in Japan, suggesting yen weakness is likely to persist Goldman Sachs has laid out a bullish case for the US dollar, arguing that the ongoing energy price shock will keep American yields elevated and drive the greenback higher across a broad range of Group of 10 currencies, with the bank identifying the Swedish krona, euro and British pound as its preferred positions to sell against the dollar. The call, set out by Goldman strategists in a Tuesday note, rests on the intersection of two forces that have come to define the macro landscape since the US and Israeli attack on Iran in late February: persistently high inflation and an economy that has so far proved resilient enough to prevent the Federal Reserve from pivoting toward rate cuts.

That combination, Fishman argued, has already driven yields higher for longer than many anticipated, and any further concern about how long the energy shock will last should reinforce relative returns consistent with a terms-of-trade shift in the dollar's favour. The dollar has drawn support from two distinct sources since the conflict began. First, haven demand has lifted the greenback as investors sought refuge from geopolitical risk and volatile energy markets.

Second, and more structurally, the United States benefits from its position as the world's largest oil producer, which insulates the domestic economy from the energy shock in ways that leave it relatively better placed than heavily import-dependent peers in Europe and Asia. Elevated oil prices, rather than acting as a headwind for the US economy as they might in prior decades, now feed back into a stronger fiscal and trade position that supports the currency. The dollar had its sharpest single-session gain of the month yesterday as oil prices extended their advance amid the continued closure of the Strait of Hormuz and no credible sign of a peace deal between Washington and Tehran.

On the yen, Goldman offered a cautious assessment. While the Japanese currency has been among the most visible casualties of dollar strength, and while authorities have intervened in foreign exchange markets on multiple occasions, Fishman noted that sustained intervention is difficult to maintain without a corresponding shift in underlying macroeconomic policy. With no such shift appearing imminent in Tokyo, Goldman's view implies yen weakness is likely to persist, keeping the broad dollar supported at current levels and potentially higher if the energy shock proves more durable than markets currently price. --- Goldman's call for broad dollar strength across G10 currencies, with explicit short recommendations against the krona, euro and pound, adds institutional weight to a dollar bull case that is becoming increasingly consensus as the Iran conflict drags on.

For oil markets, a stronger dollar creates a familiar feedback loop: crude priced in dollars becomes more expensive in local currency terms for importing nations, compressing demand at the margin while simultaneously reinforcing the inflationary dynamics that are keeping US yields, and therefore the dollar, elevated. The effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz extending that loop further complicates the outlook for currencies heavily exposed to energy import costs, particularly in Europe. Japanese yen intervention remains a risk but Goldman's assessment that no imminent shift in Japanese macro policy is forthcoming suggests yen weakness is likely to persist, further supporting the broad dollar index.

This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.

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