
Global currency trends paint a cautiously steady backdrop. The US Dollar Index is at 100.87, showing only modest movement on the session. The index sits just below its 7-day level of 101.22 and above its 30-day level of 100.10, suggesting a contained dollar with limited directional momentum as traders weigh domestic factors against a still-evolving global picture.
Domestic USD quotes in Vietnamese dong remain centered around the 26,100s for buying and the 26,460s for selling, underscoring the currency pair’s role as the market’s anchor. The current level for buying USD is 26,102 with selling at 26,462. Historical context shows the previous day buy around 26,463 and 7 days ago around 26,466, while 30 days ago the buy price touched about 26,404. The spread of roughly 360 dong between buying and selling continues to reflect typical market liquidity and risk management in the spot market.
Major non USD quotes show the euro trading at 29,600.41 for buying and 30,849.34 for selling. The previous day selling was near 30,849.34, with the 7-day level around 30,766.16 and the 30-day level near 31,364.62. The British pound stands at 34,544.6 for buying and 35,650.9 for selling, with the prior-day buy near 35,672.27 and 7 days ago around 35,358.41 and 30 days ago about 35,897.57. The Swiss franc is quoted at 32,215.54 buy and 33,247.25 sell, while the prior day sell was around 33,272.09, the 7-day level near 33,043.88, and the 30-day level near 33,910.43. These figures illustrate a broad-based, but uneven, adjustment across the major currency bloc against the dong.
In the smaller but actively traded corner, the Japanese yen is quoted at 158.62 for buying and 167.87 for selling, with the previous day around 169.87 and the 7-day level near 166.53, while the 30-day level hovers around 168.99. The Indian rupee shows 274.65 buy and 286.47 sell, with the previous day around 285.93, 7 days ago near 288.55, and 30 days ago near 285.13. The Korean won sits at 16.54 buy and 17.94 sell, with the previous day near 17.81, 7 days ago around 17.71, and 30 days ago around 17.82. The data collectively point to a currency market where the dong remains firmer on the USD leg but faces cross-rate dynamics that reflect global risk sentiment and regional liquidity conditions.
Looking across the board, the USD remains the dominant anchor as global risk appetite ebbs and flows. The USD/VDN spread remains a practical barometer of domestic liquidity, while the rest of the FX complex shows cautious repricing versus the dollar. The presence of high-value currencies such as the Kuwaiti dinar in the domestic screen (85,010.58 buy and 89,130.91 sell) signals wide dispersion and the variety of liquidity profiles within the market. As of 7 July 2026, traders should maintain awareness of the USD index trajectory, the evolving cross-rates, and the potential for brief volatility around intraday news flow and regional policy signals.