US dollar advances as Maduro ouster fuels rising geopolitical risks

Traders are gravitating to the greenback.

A Bloomberg gauge of the dollar rose to the strongest level in two weeks after the US’ move to oust Venezuela’s President Nicolás Maduro sparked an increase in geopolitical risks.

The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index advanced as much as 0.3% to reach the highest since December 22. Benchmark Treasury yields slipped one basis point while the euro dropped 0.3% and the Mexican peso slid 0.7%.

Traders are gravitating to the greenback as questions swirl about what’s next for Venezuela after the US captured Maduro and US President Donald Trump said Washington plans to “run” the South American country.

A raft of US reports due this week including inflation figures and non-farm payrolls data is also expected to shape the dollar’s trajectory.

“Developments in Venezuela point to a relatively quick closure rather than a prolonged military conflict,” said Christopher Wong, an analyst at Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp. in Singapore.

“While the episode preserves the bid for precious metals, for the USD, data plays a key role this week, given a heavy flow of labor and survey-related prints.”

© 2026 Bloomberg

Related posts

Africa’s copper giants cash in on historic price surge

South Africa relaxes laws to salvage firms hit by power costs

Gold, silver stumble after their best year since the 1970s

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Read More