Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Shekel falls to its lowest level versus dollar since July

Bank Hapoalim’s chief financial-market strategist notes that the dollar serves as a safe haven when markets drop.

Israeli currency. Photo by Nati Shohat/Flash90.
Israeli currency. Photo by Nati Shohat/Flash90.

The shekel has again been weakening, reaching its lowest level on Wednesday against the U.S. dollar since July.

In afternoon interbank trading, the shekel is up 0.85% versus the dollar, trading at NIS 3.445/$, and up 0.32% against the euro, trading at NIS 3.402/€.

According to a report in the Israeli business daily Globes, Bank Hapoalim chief financial-market strategist Modi Shafrir said: “If we look at the shekel against the dollar, it looks like the trend is downwards but against the basket of major currencies, the shekel is still very strong.”

Shafrir added that “when the markets fall, as is happening now, they buy dollars. The institutional investors are exposed to overseas markets through contracts and by buying dollars they increase their collateral.”

Shafrir noted that the dollar is considered secure and serves as a safe haven when markets drop.

A U.S. diplomat told the U.N. Security Council that Iran’s regime is holding “the world’s economy hostage by unlawfully attempting to restrict freedom of navigation in the Strait of Hormuz.”
“We don’t just celebrate the importance of Jerusalem to the Jewish people but to all the faiths that call Jerusalem home,” said Rep. Josh Gottheimer.
“As we have seen time and again, it is a party that still contains both camps and did not settle the argument,” Jared Sclar, a Democratic political consultant, told JNS.
A New Jersey-based medtech company founded in Israel is using beagles and AI to develop a non-invasive breath test for early cancer screening.
The department filed its amended complaint nearly a month after the Ivy League school filed a motion to dismiss the federal lawsuit.
“As disinformation spreads, we must ensure state publications inform voters—not amplify antisemitic or xenophobic rhetoric,” Democratic Assemblywoman Gail Pellerin stated.