The U.S. dollar is ending the week slightly stronger amid renewed tariff threats from the White House, which continue to unsettle global markets and reinforce trade negotiations as a key policy tool. Federal Reserve officials remain divided on the path forward, creating uncertainty around interest rate cuts, while 10-year Treasury yields rise to 4.38 percent and Bitcoin hits a record high of 118,000 dollars. Abroad, the British pound slipped over half a percent following weak industrial and manufacturing data, and the Mexican peso declined despite better-than-expected economic figures, as investors grow cautious over potential trade tensions tied to USMCA.