Foreign exchange rates on the world market
In the US market, the US Dollar Index (DXY) measuring the greenback's fluctuations against six major currencies (EUR, JPY, GBP, CAD, SEK, CHF) increased by 0.16% to 99.44.
The US dollar rebounded slightly in the last trading session, and is on track for its first monthly gain against the Japanese yen this year.
A federal appeals court on Thursday temporarily reinstated the largest tariffs imposed by Trump, a day after a trade court ruled that Trump had exceeded his authority in imposing them and ordered them to be blocked immediately. While it is unclear which specific tariffs will remain in place for trading partners, traders expect some form of the tariffs to remain.
“We’re definitely going to have tariffs. They may not be as dramatic as what was announced on April 2, but we’re still going to see them,” said Steve Englander, head of global G10 currency research and North America macro strategy at Standard Chartered Bank in New York. “One thing the court ruling may have done is limit the amount of shock Trump can create with a headline or a press conference,” he added.
White House trade adviser Peter Navarro said the Trump administration would seek other ways to enforce tariffs if it ultimately loses legal disputes over trade policy. Meanwhile, investors remain concerned that the tariffs will slow economic growth and reignite inflation, although pending tariff-delay agreements with China and the European Union have eased some pessimism about the U.S. economic outlook.
The May jobs report due next Friday will be closely watched to gauge whether the US labor market is weakening, especially after last week's jobless claims rose more than expected.
On the other hand, the euro fell 0.12% to $1.1356. The currency is on track to gain 0.27% for the month, its smallest gain since February.
German inflation fell in May, bringing it closer to the European Central Bank's 2% target and strengthening the case for an interest rate cut next week.
The dollar fell 0.21% against the Japanese yen to 143.88. The greenback is on track for a 0.6% monthly gain against the Japanese currency, its first monthly gain since December 2024.
Domestic foreign exchange rates
In the domestic market, at the beginning of the trading session on May 31, the State Bank announced the central exchange rate of the Vietnamese Dong against the USD increased by 16 VND, currently at 24,978 VND.
The reference exchange rate at the State Bank's transaction office increased slightly, currently at: 23,780 VND - 26,176 VND.
USD exchange rates at commercial banks are as follows:
At Vietcombank , the USD exchange rate is 25,810 - 26,200 VND/USD, unchanged in both directions, compared to yesterday's trading session.
VietBank is buying USD cash at the lowest price: 1 USD = 24,015 VND; buying USD transfer at the lowest price: 1 USD = 24,045 VND
HSBC Bank is buying USD cash at the highest price: 1 USD = 25,898 VND; buying USD transfer at the highest price: 1 USD = 25,898 VND
VIB Bank is selling USD cash at the lowest price: 1 USD = 25,760 VND; selling USD transfer at the lowest price: 1 USD = 25,760 VND
Eximbank is selling USD cash at the highest price: 1 USD = 26,226 VND
ABBank is selling USD transfers at the highest price: 1 USD = 26,226 VND
In the "black market", the black market USD exchange rate as of 4:30 a.m. on May 31, 2025 increased by 7 VND in both buying and selling prices compared to yesterday's trading session, trading around 26,270 - 26,370 VND/USD.
Source: https://baodaknong.vn/ty-gia-ngoai-te-hom-nay-31-05-dong-usd-dien-bien-trai-chieu-254179.html
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