Business
Dollar makes soft start to 2026 after biggest annual drop in eight years | The Express Tribune
Major currencies extend 2025 gains against dollar as markets await US data and Fed leadership signals
The US dollar made a feeble start to 2026 on Friday after struggling against most currencies last year, while the yen steadied near a 10 month low as traders awaited economic data to predict how central bankers direct interest rates this year.
A narrowing interest rate difference between the US and other economies cast a shadow over the market last year, resulting in most currencies gaining sharply against the dollar, with the Japanese yen an exception.
Worries about the US fiscal deficit, a global trade war and concern about Federal Reserve independence took a toll on the greenback, and those issues are likely to linger into 2026.
The euro EUR= was steady at $1.1752 on the first trading day of the year after surging 13.5% last year, while sterling GBP= last bought $1.3473 following a 7.7% increase in 2025. Both clocked their steepest annual increases since 2017.
Markets in Japan and China were closed on Friday, making for light trading volume and little movement.
Dwindling Dollar dominance
The dollar index =USD, which measures the US currency against six other units, was at 98.186 after registering a 9.4% decline in 2025, its biggest drop in eight years.
“We have seen the peak in dollar supremacy,” said Kyle Rodda, senior market analyst at Capital.com. Even so, there has not been two consecutive years of decline in the dollar index for two decades, he said.
“I believe its demise has been overstated and that the relative strength of the US economy will mean we see it bounce back this year.”
Economic data including US payrolls and jobless figures are due next week, providing clues on the health of the labour market and where the Fed’s policy rate may end up this year.
Much of the focus at the start of the year will be on who US President Donald Trump picks to be the next Fed chair as the term of current head Jerome Powell ends in May.
Investors are bracing for Trump’s pick to be more dovish and cut rates after the president repeatedly criticised Powell and the Fed for not cutting rates more swiftly or deeply.
Traders are pricing in two cuts this year compared to one projected by a currently divided Fed board.
“We expect that concerns around central bank independence will extend into 2026, and see the upcoming change in Fed leadership as one of several reasons why risks around our Fed funds rate forecast skew dovish,” Goldman strategists said.
Yem remains the exception
The yen JPY= was at 156.85 per US dollar after rising less than 1% against the greenback in 2025. It hovered close to the 10 month low of 157.90 touched in November that drew policymaker attention and raised the prospect of intervention.
The Bank of Japan hiked interest rates twice in last year but that did little to improve yen performance as the cautious pace frustrated investors, with speculators reversing significant long yen positions held in April.
There has also been growing investor unease about fiscal expansion under Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, though she has sought to ease some of that concern.
Traders are pricing the next BOJ rate hike as being toward the end of 2026. Min Joo Kang, senior economist at ING, expects the most likely timing to be October.
“A further fiscal push could backfire on the economy, but the current government is expected to maintain its expansionary policy stance, posing a significant risk to the economy in 2026,” Kang said in a client note.
The Australian and New Zealand dollars started the new year on the front foot. The Aussie AUD= was 0.35% higher at $0.66975 after a nearly 8% rise in 2025, its strongest yearly performance since 2020.
The kiwi NZD= snapped its three-year losing streak with a nearly 3% gain last year. On Friday, it firmed a touch to $0.5761.
Business
Mortgage lenders expect property market boost – but credit wobbles are emerging
Loan default rates are rising, but the true impact on households is yet to come as consumers brace for price rises due to the Iran war, experts have warned.
The latest Credit Conditions Survey from the Bank of England, which measures demand for new borrowing, shows defaults on loans from January to March have risen to 6.2 per cent.
In the previous quarter, there were hardly any defaults on mortgage debt, say lenders. The figures suggest consumers were already feeling the squeeze even before the Iran war, as the economy flatlined.
Karim Haji, Global and UK Head of Financial Services at accountancy firm KPMG, said: “Rising default rates show that underlying pressure is building. The impact of the prolonged conflict on fuel prices is adding new pressure on household finances, and the full impact of higher costs and mortgage rates is still feeding through.”
But the mortgage and property market is still expected to see rising demand in the coming months, experts say.
For secured lending defaults, which include mortgages, the Bank recorded 6.2 per cent in the first quarter of 2026, the highest since the last three months of 2024 (7.8 per cent), when the UK had seen multiple hikes in interest rates. The data for the first three months of 2026 marked a reversal from the fall in defaults reported in the last six months of 2025.
For unsecured lending defaults, such as credit cards, the Bank reported a fourth consecutive quarter of rising defaults (18.6 per cent in the first quarter of 2026). This was the highest figure since the last quarter of 2023 (25.7 per cent).
According to the Bank, demand for home loans and other debt remained high in the run-up to the Iran war, as borrowing costs fell.
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Lenders had expected demand to keep growing as interest rates came down, but that may now have changed as borrowers become less optimistic, or have to refinance mortgages at higher rates as fixed-rate deals came to a close.
Mr Haji added: “Stable demand for unsecured lending shows households turning to credit to manage their increasing day-to-day spend. While some borrowers are still able to access credit, others are beginning to struggle with repayments, pointing to possible early stages of credit deterioration.”
Bond yields, the amount the government pays in interest on its borrowing, which link to mortgage prices, have eased this week following the announcement of a ceasefire.
Aside from credit wobbles, the Bank of England’s Credit Conditions Survey finds that lenders expect mortgage demand to increase over the coming months.

Damien Burke, Head of Regulatory Practice at consultancy Broadstone, said: “The latest Credit Conditions Survey suggests a cautiously improving outlook for the mortgage market at the start of the year, with lenders expecting demand to pick up in the coming months, particularly for house purchases and remortgaging. This reflects a degree of pent-up demand as home buyers awaited lower interest rates and a more certain fiscal landscape.”
But the survey was done just as the Middle East conflict began. The longer it continues, the worse the blow to borrower and lenders, brokers warn.
Raj Abrol, CEO of risk platform Galytix, said: “What started as a conflict in the Middle East is now showing up in borrowing costs right across the economy. Mortgage rates have jumped from 4.8 per cent to over 5.5 per cent — that’s an extra £1,000 a year on a typical £200,000 mortgage. The ongoing turmoil of the Iran crisis has spooked many of the big banks, leading to a surge in mortgage rates and increased pressure on homeowners. Against this complex backdrop, a rise in defaults could well continue for many months as inflation persists and cost-of-living crisis worsens. The longer this uncertainty continues, lenders will continue to remain risk-averse, making access to credit a bigger challenge for consumers.”
For companies, the cost of short-term borrowing has also jumped. When credit gets more expensive, it hurts businesses’ funding for payroll, small and medium-sized businesses refinance, and consumers whose credit cards and car loans quietly reset higher. With a million fixed-rate mortgage deals expiring by September and inflation heading towards 3.5 per cent, the longer this goes on, the more defaults move from a slow creep to something banks have to take seriously, risk experts warn.
Mr Burke adds: “The fall-out from the Ukraine conflict on inflation and mortgage rates remains fresh in the minds of households, and even short-term disruption to supply chains can have a long-term impact on the cost of goods. This further amplifies the need for understanding consumers’ individual affordability when assessing for credit products.”
Business
Iran war doubles Russia’s main oil revenue to $9bn in April, show calculations – SUCH TV
Russia will see revenue from its biggest single oil tax double to $9 billion in April due to the oil and gas crisis triggered by the US and Israeli attack on Iran, Reuters calculations showed on Thursday.
The Reuters calculation is some of the first concrete evidence of a windfall for Russia, the world’s second-largest oil exporter, from the Iran war, which oil traders say has triggered the most serious energy crisis in recent history.
Iran effectively shut the Strait of Hormuz — a route for about a fifth of global oil and LNG flows — after US and Israeli airstrikes on Iran at the end of February, sending Brent futures shooting well past $100 per barrel.
Russia’s main revenue from its vast oil and gas industry is based on production. Export duty on crude oil has been nullified from the start of 2024 as part of the so-called wider tax manoeuvre, a years-long tax reform of the industry.
According to Reuters calculations based on preliminary production data and oil prices, Russia’s mineral extraction tax on oil output will increase in April to around ₽700 billion ($9 billion) from ₽327 billion in March. The revenue is up by some 10% from April last year.
For the whole of 2026, Russia has budgeted for ₽7.9 trillion from the mineral extraction tax.
Russian energy in demand
The average price of Russia’s Urals crude, used for taxation, jumped to $77 per barrel in March, its highest since October 2023, according to economy ministry data.
That was up 73% from February’s $44.59 per barrel and above the level of $59 assumed in this year’s state budget.
The Kremlin said on Tuesday there were a huge number of requests for Russian energy from a range of different places amid a grave global energy crisis that was shaking the foundations of the oil and gas markets.
Still, there are limits on the windfall for Russia, and economists inside Russia have repeatedly cautioned that 2026 could be a tough year.
Russia ran a budget deficit of ₽4.58 trillion, or 1.9% of gross domestic product, in January-March 2026, the finance ministry said on Wednesday.
And Ukraine’s attacks on Russian energy infrastructure, with an aim to cripple Moscow’s finances, have also contributed to lower earnings and threaten oil production cuts.
The size of the windfall for Russia will ultimately depend on how long the Iran crisis lasts.
Business
Lidl begins building its first pub at site in Dundonald, Northern Ireland
The development is an unusual consequence of Northern Ireland’s strict licensing laws.
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