The Fort Worth Press - Iran lifts Dollar, sinks Euro

USD -
AED 3.672499
AFN 62.496346
ALL 82.001718
AMD 366.494845
ANG 1.79046
AOA 918.000322
ARS 1402.038196
AUD 1.397155
AWG 1.8
AZN 1.689039
BAM 1.680241
BBD 2.006873
BDT 122.465636
BGN 1.66992
BHD 0.375773
BIF 2967.08208
BMD 1
BND 1.276235
BOB 6.88488
BRL 5.021602
BSD 0.996392
BTN 95.293814
BWP 13.475945
BYN 2.735739
BYR 19600
BZD 2.003952
CAD 1.38051
CDF 2254.999746
CHF 0.78243
CLF 0.022795
CLP 897.129915
CNY 6.79475
CNH 6.79046
COP 3681.68
CRC 450.945017
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 94.729381
CZK 20.86865
DJF 177.431271
DKK 6.4201
DOP 58.728522
DZD 133.167526
EGP 52.959397
ERN 15
ETB 160.632302
EUR 0.8592
FJD 2.206101
FKP 0.744085
GBP 0.741805
GEL 2.659993
GGP 0.744085
GHS 11.568729
GIP 0.744085
GMD 72.498462
GNF 8736.570692
GTQ 7.597938
GYD 208.427835
HKD 7.83525
HNL 26.50945
HRK 6.471301
HTG 130.537172
HUF 307.4695
IDR 17699
ILS 2.890968
IMP 0.744085
INR 95.71975
IQD 1305.24055
IRR 1323400.000246
ISK 123.550204
JEP 0.744085
JMD 157.293814
JOD 0.709031
JPY 158.921502
KES 129.503721
KGS 87.449908
KHR 3994.843146
KMF 425.000193
KPW 900.001042
KRW 1513.885341
KWD 0.30951
KYD 0.830326
KZT 470.541237
LAK 21836.769759
LBP 89248.453608
LKR 333.281787
LRD 182.33677
LSL 16.435137
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 6.349656
MAD 9.192096
MDL 17.282646
MGA 4186.426117
MKD 52.955326
MMK 2099.467275
MNT 3579.906471
MOP 8.042182
MRU 39.816151
MUR 47.379934
MVR 15.396076
MWK 1727.749141
MXN 17.2622
MYR 3.954103
MZN 63.898126
NAD 16.435137
NGN 1367.630172
NIO 36.682424
NOK 9.267925
NPR 152.469931
NZD 1.702955
OMR 0.384751
PAB 0.996392
PEN 3.397165
PGK 4.345361
PHP 61.582017
PKR 277.408419
PLN 3.64105
PYG 6072.164948
QAR 3.642955
RON 4.507298
RSD 100.867698
RUB 70.994377
RWF 1456.701031
SAR 3.740034
SBD 8.045182
SCR 13.690722
SDG 600.500338
SEK 9.31543
SGD 1.277185
SHP 0.746601
SLE 24.600714
SLL 20969.502105
SOS 569.415808
SRD 37.154007
STD 20697.981008
STN 21.057155
SVC 8.718213
SYP 110.525094
SZL 16.431271
THB 32.549924
TJS 9.256529
TMT 3.5
TND 2.916838
TOP 2.40776
TRY 45.7326
TTD 6.762887
TWD 31.453992
TZS 2605.67301
UAH 44.098883
UGX 3773.195876
UYU 39.888316
UZS 11954.467354
VES 526.210498
VND 26365
VUV 117.452558
WST 2.724798
XAF 563.536942
XAG 0.012738
XAU 0.000219
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.79579
XDR 0.700859
XOF 563.536942
XPF 102.457045
YER 238.650185
ZAR 16.35285
ZMK 9001.207848
ZMW 18.756873
ZWL 321.999592
  • CMSD

    0.0100

    22.73

    +0.04%

  • GSK

    -0.1500

    51.38

    -0.29%

  • NGG

    0.1900

    86.61

    +0.22%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    22.66

    +0.04%

  • RELX

    -0.3300

    33.01

    -1%

  • BCE

    0.2100

    24.6

    +0.85%

  • AZN

    -2.7200

    187.03

    -1.45%

  • BTI

    -0.3700

    65.36

    -0.57%

  • VOD

    -0.1700

    14.94

    -1.14%

  • BCC

    0.0500

    67.16

    +0.07%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    12.87

    +0.39%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    63.5

    0%

  • RYCEF

    0.1600

    16.64

    +0.96%

  • RIO

    -0.5300

    104.23

    -0.51%

  • BP

    -0.5100

    44.36

    -1.15%


Iran lifts Dollar, sinks Euro




To say the dollar is crushing the euro sounds like tabloid economics. Yet the first full geopolitical stress test of 2026 has produced exactly the directional result implied by that phrase. Money is again flooding toward the U.S. currency while the euro is being repriced against a harsher reality: Europe remains more vulnerable to imported energy shocks, trade disruption and slower growth than the United States.

By the end of the first week of March, EUR/USD was trading around 1.16, the dollar index was back near 99, and oil had surged above $90 a barrel as traders priced a wider Middle East disruption. That is not a historic collapse of the single currency. It is, however, a decisive reminder of how quickly markets still fall back into the old hierarchy when fear becomes the dominant force.

Iran is central to that hierarchy test, not because its economy sets the global reserve system, but because it sits at the junction where sanctions, energy flows, shipping lanes and regional war all collide. Internally, the country has been living through a severe monetary breakdown. The rial plunged to roughly 1.5 million to the dollar earlier this year, protests erupted, and the state’s response deepened the atmosphere of repression and uncertainty. Externally, every escalation connected to Iran forces markets to reprice the cost of moving oil, gas, cargo and capital.

The Strait of Hormuz is the critical mechanism. Roughly 20 million barrels a day of oil and about a fifth of global LNG trade move through that narrow channel. Any threat there instantly travels through crude contracts, gas benchmarks, marine insurance, tanker availability and inflation expectations. Europe does not have to be the largest direct buyer of Hormuz crude to be hit hard. It is enough that Europe is the more energy-sensitive, more import-dependent, and more politically fragmented economic bloc.

That vulnerability is now colliding with a euro area that was improving, but still far from robust. Inflation in February edged back up to 1.9 percent. Output in the fourth quarter of 2025 rose just 0.2 percent. The ECB’s own baseline for 2026 is growth of 1.2 percent. Those are not the numbers of an economy built to absorb a prolonged external energy shock without political or financial strain. If fuel, gas and freight costs remain elevated, the euro area is pushed back toward the policy trap that haunted it after 2022: softer activity, stickier prices, and a currency market that demands a discount for both.

The logistics channel makes the shock even broader than the oil story suggests. Trade between Asia, the Gulf and Europe is already being rerouted or repriced. Airfreight costs on Asia-Europe lanes have jumped sharply. Shipping delays, war-risk premiums and booking suspensions are beginning to feed through supply chains. That matters for Europe because the euro is not merely a currency. It is the price label attached to an industrial and consumer economy that still depends on long, vulnerable trade arteries.

The United States is not immune. Higher oil prices, tighter freight and nervous markets will still hit American households and businesses. But the U.S. enters this episode with a different energy position, deeper domestic capital markets and a far greater capacity to attract crisis money. In other words, the same shock that raises inflation risk can also increase demand for the currency in which that shock is being hedged. That is a privilege the euro still does not fully share.

This is why the phrase “monetary order” is not exaggerated. The international order is not defined only by speeches about multipolarity or by occasional non-dollar trade settlements. It is defined by what investors, banks, commodity traders, insurers and central banks actually do when a geopolitical shock threatens liquidity. They reach for the currency that dominates settlement, collateral, sovereign debt markets and emergency funding. They reach for the dollar.

Even the reserve data tells a more sober story than the rhetoric around de-dollarization. Diversification is real, but it remains gradual rather than revolutionary. In the latest IMF reserve snapshot for 2025’s second quarter, the dollar still accounted for 56.32 percent of allocated foreign-exchange reserves. The euro stood at 21.13 percent. That is a meaningful role for the single currency, but it is not monetary parity. And when a live geopolitical shock erupts on the edge of the world’s most important energy corridor, that gap becomes political as well as financial.

Iran’s turmoil sharpens the lesson. A collapsing currency is not just an economic symptom. It is a measure of shrinking state credibility. The more households and firms in Iran think in dollars, gold or foreign stores of value, the less authority the rial has as a unit of account, a store of value and a symbol of sovereignty. Sanctions then do more than cut revenue; they tighten the external constraints around a country whose domestic money is already losing legitimacy. That is why chaos in Iran can radiate into the wider monetary system without Iran ever becoming a reserve-currency power itself.

There is also a strategic irony here. For years, the most confident forecasts of a post-dollar world assumed that repeated sanctions, geopolitical fragmentation and alternative payment channels would steadily weaken America’s monetary primacy. Yet in the current crisis, the opposite short-term effect has emerged. The harsher the fear, the more the market reverts to dollar behavior. That does not invalidate the long debate over a more multipolar currency future. It simply proves that the future has not arrived yet.

For Europe, the conclusion is uncomfortable but unavoidable. The euro cannot become a true equal to the dollar on institutional elegance alone. It needs faster and more durable growth, deeper capital markets, more unified fiscal capacity, and an energy system that is far less exposed to external shocks. Until those foundations are stronger, every major geopolitical disruption will tell the same story: the dollar gathers panic, the euro absorbs vulnerability.

For markets, the next chapter depends on duration. If the conflict is contained, shipping stabilizes and energy infrastructure avoids further damage, part of the dollar’s new crisis premium can evaporate. But if Hormuz remains constrained, if Gulf export capacity is knocked back further, or if sanctions and retaliation intensify, the euro will face a far tougher test. In that world, a move toward much lower euro levels would stop being a speculative talking point and start becoming the working assumption of 2026.

So the slogan is dramatic, but the underlying verdict is real. The dollar is not obliterating the euro. It is, however, beating it decisively in the one contest that still defines the system when panic strikes: the market’s instantaneous vote on which currency can carry fear. Chaos in Iran has not created a new monetary order. It has exposed, with uncomfortable clarity, how much of the old one still survives.