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.

“Vang is currently riding a wave of progressive energy that has been deciding Democratic primaries across the country,” Dan Schnur, a political science lecturer, told JNS.
Preliminary data for 2026 suggests a volume of antisemitism that is second only to 2023, during which the Oct. 7 attacks occurred, B’nai Brith Canada said.
Only 93 members of the Democratic caucus opposed an amendment to end aid Israel in a vote that split the Democratic leadership and further revealed one of the sharpest divides in politics on the American left.
The law negates the binding nature of legal opinions and grants the government the authority to represent its own position in court even if it differs from that of the AG.
Republican lawmakers on the House Committee on Education and Workforce grilled the leaders of three public medical schools over their past diversity, equity and inclusion efforts.
Despite ongoing security concerns, families across the United States chose to send their children on the four-week educational trip to strengthen their connection to Israel.