2025-04-24 11:07:02
The U.S. dollar is trying to pick itself up after one of the steepest two‑month declines since the Plaza Accord four decades ago, yet the recovery feels cosmetic. A day of calmer price action on Tuesday sparked by President Trump’s assurance that he has “no intention” of firing Chair Jerome Powell and by Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent’s admission that 125 % reciprocal tariffs on China are “unsustainable” barely dents the bigger picture: from 3 February to 21 April the broad DXY index dropped 10.7 %. Only three modern episodes the 1987 crash, the dot‑com hangover in 2002, and the 2023 inflation shock saw a faster fall.
Washington’s softer rhetoric matters, but words alone cannot rebuild the global appetite for U.S. assets that this administration has shaken. Market psychology shifted the moment the White House unleashed across the board tariffs on 2 April. Suddenly investors had to price not just slower trade but an executive branch willing to weaponize the currency and the central bank. When that line is crossed, every subsequent statement is discounted for credibility.
A genuine floor under the dollar would require at least one of two things:
Until materialises, rallies look like short‑covering.
Across the Atlantic, President Macron is weighing an early parliamentary election once the legal blackout lifts in July. He senses an opening: Marine Le Pen’s embezzlement conviction has dented the Rassemblement National’s polling and replacing her with Jordan Bardella has yet to ignite the base. A fresh mandate might give Macron legislative muscle just as Europe confronts a revived Trump doctrine. Still, French snap elections rarely soothe investors remember last year’s scare. The twist this time is that demand for Eurozone paper is booming. February balance‑of‑payments data show Japanese institutions bought €1.6 trillion in core‑EZ bonds, the fattest monthly ticket since 2019, with French OATs leading the charge.
The message: global capital is happy to trade some French political noise for a haven from tariff‑heavy America.
That same Japanese bid also explains why EUR/JPY has inched higher even as U.S. yields yo‑yo. For now, the Bank of Japan is content to stay in wait‑and‑see mode, letting the yen act as a gentle shock absorber while capital looks for alternatives to Treasuries.
I continue to treat dollar bounces as opportunities to re‑enter core shorts. In FX I prefer EUR/USD dips near 1.1050 and AUD/USD dips near 0.6250, mindful that Australia is less exposed to direct tariff fallout than Canada or Mexico. Gold remains my macro hedge so long as spot holds above USD 3,300/oz.
Markets can forgive policy mistakes; they struggle to forgive uncertainty. This week’s reversal in tone from Washington is welcome, but without hard evidence a signed deal, a policy rollback, a credible fiscal anchor the path of least resistance for the dollar is still lower.
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