Key Takeaways:
- USDCHF surged 1.3% this week and 3.3% in June as of June 19
- The Fed held rates at 3.5%-3.75% but 9 of 18 officials see a 2026 hike
- The SNB's dovish stance widens the policy gap, supporting further USDCHF gains
Key Takeaways:

The Federal Reserve's hawkish hold and the Swiss National Bank's dovish tilt have widened the policy gap between the two central banks, pushing USDCHF to its strongest level in months.
The Fed held its benchmark rate at 3.5%-3.75% in Kevin Warsh's first meeting as chair but signaled at least one rate increase this year, widening the policy divergence with a dovish SNB and driving USDCHF up 1.3% this week and 3.3% since June 1.
"The commitment to deliver is strong, unanimous, and unambiguous, and that's I think an important message we've missed for five years, and we're going to fix that," Warsh told reporters after the decision, referring to the Fed's 2% inflation target that has been breached for five consecutive years.
The FOMC's dot plot showed 9 of 18 participants expect at least one rate increase by year-end, pushing the median fed funds rate projection to 3.8% from 3.4% in March. Eight officials saw no change, and one anticipated a cut. The committee raised its 2026 inflation forecast to 3.6% for headline and 3.3% for core, up sharply from 2.7% for both measures three months ago. May's consumer price index came in at 4.2% annually, the highest in three years, though core inflation moderated to 2.9%.
The policy divergence matters because the SNB, which held its rate decision on June 18, is expected to maintain or deepen its accommodative stance as Swiss inflation runs below the central bank's target. With CME FedWatch data now pricing a quarter-point hike as early as October, the rate differential between the two currencies could widen further, boosting USDCHF and pressuring Swiss exporters who compete in dollar-denominated markets.
Rate Differentials Drive the Trade
The last time the Fed signaled a hiking cycle while a major European central bank held dovish was in 2022, when the Fed's 425 basis points of tightening versus the ECB's delayed response pushed the trade-weighted dollar index to a two-decade high. While the current gap is smaller — the Fed has been on hold since cutting 75 basis points in the second half of 2025 — the directional shift is what matters for FX markets.
USDCHF has gained more than 3.3% since the start of June, accelerating after the FOMC statement was released. The post-meeting communique was shortened to 130 words from 341 in April, removing prior language that had signaled a bias toward future cuts. Warsh also declined to submit his own dot-plot projection and announced task forces to review the Fed's communication framework, including press conferences, meeting transcripts and the dot-plot tool itself.
What Comes Next
The next FOMC meeting is scheduled for July 28-29, followed by meetings in September, October and December. Overnight index swaps currently assign a 62% probability to a quarter-point hike by the October meeting, according to CME data. If inflation prints continue to run hot — particularly the core PCE measure, which the Fed targets — that probability could rise further.
For USDCHF, the key level to watch is the June high. A break above that would open the path toward levels not seen since late 2025, when the dollar last rallied on a hawkish repricing of Fed expectations. On the downside, any surprise dovish shift from Warsh or a sharp decline in oil prices — which have added 37% since the start of the Iran war — could reverse the pair's recent gains.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.