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As US stocks hit records, experts see the dollar falling further

As US stocks hit records, experts see the dollar falling further

Business Times2 days ago
[NEW YORK] While the US stock market has fully recovered from a spring rout, the relentless drop in the dollar is prompting currency experts to warn of greater financial market turmoil ahead.
The American currency is down more than 10 per cent so far in 2025, a historic retreat that has overlapped with occasional spikes in long-term US Treasury yields.
The anomalous dynamic suggests investors are rethinking US holdings, once considered safe havens, as they take stock of President Donald Trump's unpredictable policy shifts.
While the dollar's status as the global reserve currency appears unshakeable in the near future, many currency experts expect the greenback to continue to weaken in the coming years, given expectations for slower growth after a long run of US out-performance.
'It's US exceptionalism basically falling by the wayside and the rest of the world playing catch-up,' said Erik Nelson, a macro strategist at Wells Fargo, who predicts the dollar will continue to depreciate.
In April, global markets were shaken by 'Sell America' gyrations in the stock, foreign exchange and US treasury markets, and analysts expect similar sentiment in the future.
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'I think the world is becoming a little bit less stable politically, which is generally kind of problematic for economic and financial market volatility,' Nelson said.
'We are witnessing the end of a 14-year bull run of the US dollar,' said Joseph Brusuelas, chief economist at RSM US, a consultancy, who expects a 'multi-year unwinding of the dollar.'
Harvard economist Kenneth Rogoff, author of the 2025 book Our Dollar Your Problem, said central banks in China and elsewhere were diversifying away from dollars even before 2025, but that Trump accelerated the trend.
'I think we'll see a period of a lot of financial volatility, largely centered around the chaos in the United States,' Rogoff told AFP, pointing to factors that include uncertainty about US central bank independence and the rise of populism.
'We'll probably have a more volatile period in financial markets over the next 10 years than we have in the preceding.'
Onshoring benefit
Both Nelson and Rogoff pointed out that the dollar at the start of 2025 was unusually lofty after surging in the weeks following Trump's November 2024 victory.
Economists have since rethought assumptions that the US would continue to outperform rival economies.
According to the ICE US Dollar Index, a basket of seven currencies, the dollar fell 10.7 per cent through the end of June, the biggest drop in the first six months of a year since 1973.
On Thursday, the dollar index rose modestly after solid US jobs data dimmed odds for imminent Federal Reserve interest rate cuts.
With a gain of more than 13 per cent against the dollar, the euro has been among the biggest winners following Germany's big fiscal investments in defense, even as the European Central Bank continued to cut interest rates.
Besides a weaker US economic outlook, the shift in the dollar reflects expectations for looser US monetary policy.
Trump has taken relentless aim at Jerome Powell, referring to the Federal Reserve Chair as 'a stupid person' while calling for interset rates 'at least two to three points lower' -- a huge shift in monetary policy.
While Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and other top officials have rejected suggestions they prefer a cheap dollar, a less expensive currency is beneficial to US exporters and consistent with the administration's stated goal of beefing up manufacturing.
'Lower interest rates and a weaker dollar would enable the US to strengthen its economic self-sufficiency and increase onshoring,' said Jason Schenker of Prestige Economics, who argues that the moves align with a muscular national security posture towards China.
Market watchers have come to expect Trump to modulate his actions in response to big negative market swings.
On April 9, Trump backtracked on many of the most onerous tariffs from his 'Liberation Day' announcement a week earlier after a spike in Treasury bond yields hammered stocks. Later that month, he said he has 'no intention' of firing Powell after earlier comments set markets ablaze.
But equity markets so far appear unfazed by dollar weakness, with both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq ending Thursday's session at records.
'At some point it's going to get investors' attention,' Cresset Capital Management's Jack Ablin said of the weak dollar.
'It signals foreign investors are less inclined to own US assets.' AFP
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Weeks later, the Trumps and Mr Mehta signed a new licensing deal for a commercial office tower in Pune, India. They announced yet another deal – their sixth – in April. Mr Mehta did not respond to requests for comment but has said that Trump-branded properties draw heightened interest in India. Mr Trump's deals on the Arabian Peninsula all share a connection to one man: Lebanese-born construction executive Ziad El Chaar, who first brought Mr Trump into a branding agreement in 2013, for a golf course in Dubai, through a construction company based there called DAMAC. Mr El Chaar has since become CEO of DarGlobal, a subsidiary of Dar Al Arkan Real Estate, a large Saudi Arabia-based construction company with ties to the Saudi government. He has signed five more deals with the Trumps since the summer of 2024. During a DarGlobal event introducing the Oman project, Mr El Chaar said the Trump name 'immediately put the project on the global map'. Through a spokesperson, Mr El Chaar declined to discuss DarGlobal's contracts with the Trumps. Financial support from Saudi Arabia has also helped Mr Trump's golf courses. Since 2022, the Saudi-backed LIV Golf league has paid him to host annual tournaments at his resorts in Doral, Florida, and Bedminster, New Jersey. Neither the league nor Mr Trump has revealed the amount of money involved. Mr Trump has used his presidential bully pulpit to advocate for a merger between the US-based PGA Tour and LIV Golf, which could reunite the world's top golfers on courses Mr Trump owns. On his federal financial disclosure forms, Mr Trump has not been required to divulge the full amount promised to him in any of his licensing deals, only what he receives during a given year, which sometimes includes a management fee. What information he has released suggests that the Trumps have raised the price for use of their name. Mr Trump's tax returns during his television celebrity years showed payments in round numbers when he signed a licensing contract, typically $750,000 or $1 million. Financial disclosure forms he recently filed showed payments of exactly $5 million each for the deal in Vietnam and one with Mr El Chaar's company. But in terms of the potential for anyone, from anywhere, to transmit hundreds of millions of dollars to a US President, the recent wave of licensing agreements was only a warmup. A Massive Stockpile In December 2024, just months after Trump and his two eldest sons made their first public comments in support of digital currencies, Mr Eric Trump was invited to appear as the keynote speaker at a bitcoin conference in Abu Dhabi. He addressed the question he presumed to be on everyone's mind: Why are you here? 'I know all of you are thinking: 'Eric, you're from real estate family. You've spent your entire life in real estate, concrete, drywall,'' he said. 'I built Trump Chicago,' he added twice, referring to a four-year project completed when he was 24. Sixteen years after completion of the Chicago tower, the Trumps still invoke its memory to establish business gravitas and their chosen identity as real estate developers. But their recent moves into crypto and other enterprises bear more in common with Mr Donald Trump's licensing deals: little or no investment, risk or operational responsibility. Mr Trump, and to a lesser extent his sons, generally serve as a means to draw attention and convert the president's political supporters into investors and paying customers. Mr Trump has invested nothing in Trump Media, the parent company of the social media site Truth Social, and has no official duties. But he received more than half of the company's stock, a stake that has fallen in value but is still worth $2 billion. In crypto, the Trumps have entered into a series of partnerships. Their partners were the ones who have invested most or all of the capital, or raised money through token sales, and run the businesses. The crypto coins issued to the Trump family through its first foray into the sector, World Liberty Financial, have recently been worth at least $236 million. The Trumps' sale of meme coins, otherwise worthless collectible digital trinkets, has been particularly lucrative. The fees collected by Mr Trump and his associates on those sales have so far totalled $320 million, according to Chainalysis, a crypto analytics firm. The meme coins have proved to be a multimillion-dollar leap from the Trump-branded Bibles, guitars and watches that the Trumps sold during the 2024 campaign. The long-term viability of the new businesses remains unclear, as does the liquidity of some of Mr Trump's holdings in them. He cannot yet sell most of his crypto coins. And he would most likely crush Trump Media if he unloaded his stock, even as the company continues to lose money and struggles to produce $1 million per quarter in revenue, roughly the average of a single McDonald's restaurant. But the new cash has already helped solve old problems. Last month, the Trumps paid off the $115 million mortgage coming due on 40 Wall Street. Analysts had said that the building's low rental income would make banks squeamish about refinancing. Going forward, the new enterprises represent a massive stockpile with the potential to cover legal judgments, mortgage payments and holes in balance sheets for years to come. NYTIMES

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