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Analysis

The Dollar is weakening, as set by seasonality

  • December, a seasonally weak month for the dollar, coincided with expectations of aggressive easing by the Fed.
  • Divergence in monetary policy is helping the Yen and the Australian dollar.

The first step is the hardest! At the start of winter, the dollar's decline accelerated, a trend consistent with seasonal patterns. December is traditionally a bearish month for the US currency — over the past 25 years, the dollar has declined on 18 occasions. The repatriation of profits by non-residents from investments in US stocks and bonds requires USD sales. Given the record demand for US securities from foreign investors, this process could give new impetus to the EURUSD rally.

Usually in December, the US dollar performs the worst against the franc and the Swedish krona. At the same time, the struggle with the yen and the Loonie intensifies to the limit. The former looks like the favourite this time around amid expectations of a key rate hike by the Bank of Japan in December. The decline in USD/JPY is developing alongside the growing chances of a rate hike from 0.5% to 0.75% on 19 December.

Investors are playing on the divergence in monetary policy. The Fed is expected to cut rates to 3% in 2026, whereas the BoJ forecasted a hike to 1.25%. The narrowing of the yield spread between these countries' bonds shifts the balance in favour of the yen on Forex next year.

The anticipation of death is worse than death itself. Donald Trump's statement that the new Fed chair will be announced in early 2026, rather than by Christmas as Scott Bessent had previously said, is not helping the dollar. Along with the expectation of Kevin Hassett's arrival at the helm of the Fed, the expected scale of monetary expansion is growing. This is bad news for USD.

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