Non-U.S. currencies strengthened as the U.S. dollar index fell by over 1% during Thursday's New York session, according to Jin10. This week marked a rare 'super central bank week' with policy meetings held by central banks in the U.S., Japan, the UK, Canada, and the Eurozone, along with several emerging economies. On Wednesday, both the Federal Reserve and the Bank of Canada decided to keep interest rates unchanged. Similarly, on Thursday, the Bank of Japan, the Bank of England, the European Central Bank, as well as the central banks of Switzerland and Sweden, made the same decision. These institutions expressed caution over the potential for rising energy prices to trigger a wave of inflation across broader economic sectors. Even Brazil's central bank, which has the highest interest rates among major economies, opted for a modest 25 basis point cut to 14.75%, contrary to market expectations of a 50 basis point reduction. Haru Chanana, Chief Investment Strategist at Saxo in Singapore, noted that the escalation of the situation in Iran appears to be a turning point for the market, as the conflict now impacts the global energy system's core, beyond just military headlines or the Strait of Hormuz blockade. The growing risk of stagflation is currently unsettling the market.