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What If the Mar-a-Lago accord is about to get set in motion

What If?

Take this with a grain of salt. This is not a forecast. It is a risk map.

Markets rarely wait for treaties or ceremonies. They move when the language changes. Watch the Mar-a-Lago trial balloons closely because this Treasury wording is not accidental. When Washington starts calling the yuan substantially undervalued in plain sight, it is not doing academic currency work. It is laying track. Track toward a world where the dollar carries a little less of the adjustment burden, and Asia carries a little more. Press Japan on a yen stuck near multi-decade lows. Nudge China to let the renminbi rise. At that point, you are no longer debating policy preferences. You are sketching the outline of a reprice.

This is how reserve regimes can potentially turn. Not with a ribbon cutting, but with a series of reasonable asks that quietly reset what normal looks like. Strengthen the two biggest export currencies in Asia, and you do not even have to mention Europe. The euro gains share by gravity alone as the dollar’s relative dominance softens and reserve managers drift toward the next deepest pool. The trick is not selling a new order as a revolution. It is selling it as housekeeping. Timely. Orderly. In line with fundamentals. The kind of language that lowers defences while it moves the furniture.

FX is where the first cracks appear, but rates and equities are where the structure cheers and groans. A stronger CNY and JPY tighten Asia by stealth while easing the US narrative around imported disinflation and competitiveness. Macro tourists rush in because they always do. The dollar never falls cleanly. It stumbles, it rebounds, it invites people onto the floor, then it changes the music. Direction matters more than rhythm. When Treasury spotlights the RMB while quietly noting the yen is still anchored near historic lows, it is telling you which numbers it wants to move without ever using the word target. Currency diplomacy is just rate differentials in tailored clothing, and if Japan is asked to wear more of the strong currency suit, markets will immediately test the seams. Can normalization happen without cracking the bond market? Can stronger FX be absorbed without bruising a fragile domestic cycle? But as importanly can global risk assets live with a strong yen? That is where real volatility lives. FX talk lights the match. Rates and stocks confirm when the fire spreads.

Equities trade the mood before they trade the math, especially in Asia. A stronger yuan is both an invitation and a warning label. It pulls capital in, flatters stability, then starts squeezing margins. China risk often rallies first because stronger currency reads like confidence. The hangover comes later when FX reality collides with earnings spreadsheets. This is not a one session event. It is a positioning theme that resolves over weeks because the money that matters turns like a cargo ship, not a speedboat. Commodities sit at the crossroads, weighing the story. A softer dollar is usually a tailwind, but a stronger CNY also reshapes demand psychology for industrial inputs and anything tied to China as the marginal buyer of belief. Gold thrives here because ambiguity is its natural climate.

For those watching from Bangkok, Thailand appearing on the monitoring list is not a footnote. It is a flare. The net is widening and the language is sharpening. On paper the criteria look clinical. Trade surplus. Current account. Intervention. In practice the message is political. In a world where Washington wants a softer dollar without saying it, surplus economies are asked to lean in or at least lean visibly. Quiet currency management becomes harder when the referee starts reading the rulebook into the microphone.

And this is where the story stops being theoretical and starts becoming dangerous. This is the murky plumbing of FX. If hedging US assets ever shifts from a niche habit into a reflex, you do not want to be standing in front of it. Picture the mechanics. You run a large FX book at a bank or hedge fund and the CIO or PM says hedge the US exposure. On a billion dollars of US bonds and equities, that is not a macro view. It is a process trade. Easy to execute. Drop it into a TWAP or VWAP and let it run. But multiply that across hundreds of funds and across the vast stock of US assets held by foreign investors, and the scale stops looking like a trade and starts looking like a stampede.

Then comes the grind. Every month, the hedge has to be rebalanced. If US assets rise, you sell more dollars to keep the hedge ratio intact. If they fall, you buy some back. The flow is mechanical, relentless, and completely indifferent to whether the trade feels crowded

The real risk sits in the first wave. If markets start to believe a Mar-a-Lago-style accord exists in practice, even without a nameplate, the initial rush to hedge is not a polite single-digit adjustment. It is synchronized behaviour on an industrial scale. Prudence turns into momentum. Momentum turns into pressure. That is how you get double-digit dollar moves without anyone ever declaring themselves bearish.

That is why this is a tail worth hedging. Not because it is the base case, but because if it shows up, it does not announce itself. It arrives as a stampede. And stampedes do not care who was early, who was clever, or who thought they had time. They only punish those standing still.

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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