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Dollar holds the high ground as valuations crack and the plumbing groans

Valuations crack and the plumbing groans

Markets this week feel like a high-wire act above a canyon of complacency. Equity valuations have climbed so far out over the safety net that even a tremor in sentiment sends traders scrambling for the dollar’s embrace. There’s no single villain in this drawdown—just the collective recognition that prices were hovering near the stratosphere. When the Shiller CAPE brushes the ghosts of the Dot-Com era and the KOSPI drops eight percent in forty-eight hours, it’s not “risk-off”—it’s gravity reasserting itself.

In FX, the retreat has taken on a distinctly defensive rhythm. High-beta currencies are bleeding out as investors unwind carry and hedge beta. The dollar, in turn, is playing its oldest role—the world’s liquidity bunker. The yen is showing signs that its former safe-haven halo is back, and Tokyo is probably happy to let it do some of the BoJ’s tightening work. The Swiss franc would ordinarily be the market's go-to refuge, but the SNB has been quick to remind markets that a surging franc is no national objective.

For now, DXY sits comfortably near the top of its three-month range—waiting for the next signal from the U.S. jobs data. The ADP report, once the punchline of macro forecasting, has regained temporary authority in the vacuum left by the missing NFP. A print around +30k would tell markets the labor market is merely cooling, not cracking—and keep December rate-cut odds below certainty. In that case, the dollar keeps its defensive bid. A weaker number, and traders will instinctively reach for risk—though in this tape, that could mean little more than a few hours of relief before gravity resumes its work.

Across the Atlantic, Europe is discovering that the old export fairy tale has been rewritten. The “China bounce” that once propelled German industry through the 2000s has turned inward, and this time the punchline isn’t growth—it’s competition. Beijing’s overbuilt factories are now exporting deflation the way they once exported hope. Chinese EVs, chemicals, and electronics are flooding European markets, crowding local producers just as domestic demand softens. The same dynamic that once sugarcoated Germany’s Hartz-era reforms now threatens to erode its industrial backbone.

Europe’s dependence on Chinese inputs—from rare earths to intermediate goods—means policymakers can’t simply close the door. They’re caught in a mirror trade: reliant on China for materials even as China eats their market share. Call it “China Shock 2.0”—an economic reflux where yesterday’s growth engine becomes tomorrow’s margin killer. It is deflationary, politically toxic, and strategically awkward. For the euro, it adds another layer of vulnerability at a time when growth optics already look gray. EUR/USD’s slide feels less about rate spreads than about structural doubt.

Meanwhile, beneath the noise of indices and currency pairs, the real story remains in the plumbing. Treasury yields should be lower given the risk mood, yet the 10-year sits stubbornly above 4%. Wednesday’s refunding announcement should be procedural, but traders are scanning for any hint that the Treasury will shift issuance toward bills to ease long-end pressure. Behind the curtain, the repo markets have been simmering—tight, but not boiling. Elevated repo rates are a sign that reserves have thinned as the Treasury rebuilds its cash balance, draining liquidity from the banking system. It’s not 2019 redux, but the smell of stress is faintly back in the air. The Fed has its fire extinguisher ready—December bill buying—if the sparks turn into smoke. Until then, the system is humming, albeit with a slightly uneven rhythm, like a pump drawing air through the pipes.

The FX landscape is defensive by necessity, not design. When equity valuations lose their updraft, traders don’t rotate—they retreat. The dollar benefits not because America looks pristine, but because everything else looks a little more fragile. Europe faces its second China reckoning, Asia is digesting its own exuberance hangover, and in the background, the Fed’s plumbing continues to gurgle. For now, the dollar’s the last dry ledge in a world where risk is starting to sweat again.

Author

Stephen Innes

Stephen Innes

SPI Asset Management

With more than 25 years of experience, Stephen has a deep-seated knowledge of G10 and Asian currency markets as well as precious metal and oil markets.

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