There's a risk you get a terrible number and there's no liquidity in the market,
ECB hawkish-ness will make it harder to keep the dollar where it is.
The interest rate advantage that the U.S. dollar had enjoyed has receded sharply over the last couple of days.
The U.S. recovery story is intact and the real side of the U.S. economy looks very positive. But you have concerns on the accounting front and they are very hard to quantify.
If the Fed indicates another hike is not set in stone, we'd probably see some dollar weakness.
He doesn't say anything very specific about current monetary policy, ... In some ways for FX markets, which have got used to Fed speakers being relatively hawkish, this may be a little disappointing (for the dollar).
The police force isn't big enough to enforce that sort of thing. This is where community expectation and standard will have to hold sway.
This is most serious assault on the dollar since January. This feels different.