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The Dollar is losing its bodyguard

Losing its bodyguard

This was not a disorderly selloff. It was something more unsettling. The dollar did not fall because markets panicked. It fell because nobody rushed to pick it up.

When the market leans on the table, and the table does not push back, price discovery changes character. That is what happened this week. The currency that has spent decades as the default shock absorber suddenly felt optional. Not broken. Not abandoned. Just no longer defended with urgency.

For years, the dollar has traded with an invisible insurance policy. If it slid too fast, someone would jawbone. If it slid too far, someone would blink. This time, the tone was relaxed. Almost approving. And FX markets understand tone better than speeches.

This was not a policy signal. It was a presidential shrug — and in FX, White House indifference moves price faster than easing cycles ever do.

The move mattered not because of the size that was put through, but because of the signal. A sharp one-day drop tells you positioning was leaning the wrong way. But the follow-through tells you something deeper has shifted. The bid under the dollar is no longer assumed. It will now have to be earned the hard way through political trust. Something this administration is short on at the moment.

Think of the dollar like a reserve asset with a volatility collar. For a generation that collar kept risk compressed. Capital could flow into US assets without demanding much compensation for currency uncertainty. That trade worked because stability was part of the product.

Now that assumption is being repriced.

A weaker dollar does not automatically mean a weaker America. In fact, the uncomfortable truth is that a strong US economy and a softer currency can coexist for a long time. That is precisely why this move is dangerous for lazy positioning. Growth is fine. Earnings are fine. Liquidity is fine. But the currency return is no longer a free lunch.

This is the heart of the new FX regime. Entry prices into US risk assets may look cheaper for foreign capital. But the risk premium required to hold them is rising as well. Lower spot. Higher demanded return. That is not a contradiction. It is a recalibration.

You can see it in the way the capital is rotating. Europe is no longer just a funding leg. Switzerland is no longer just a parking lot. Asia FX is no longer moving only when Washington gives the green light. The tape is telling you the debasement trade has gone from theory to execution.

This is not about one comment or one session. It is about removing certainty. When markets are unsure whether currency weakness will be resisted or welcomed, they stop fading it. They start respecting it.

FX is really a game of confidence. And confidence is asymmetric. It takes years to build and minutes to dent. Once traders stop believing there is a hard floor, they start mapping lower levels, not because they want to, but because they must as tail risk hedges.

In the short term, this is not a collapse call. It is a trend recognition call. Volatility in the dollar is no longer a tail risk. It is becoming part of the base case.

The dollar is still dominant. Still liquid. Still central. But it is no longer wearing a bulletproof vest. It is trading in a windbreaker.

And FX traders know exactly what to do when they feel a draft.

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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