While U.S. fiscal deficits remain high, new tariffs are reducing the trade deficit. This means fewer U.S. dollars are flowing abroad to foreign entities who would typically recycle them into buying U.S. assets like treasuries. This dynamic creates a dollar liquidity crunch, strengthening the dollar.

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Global demand for dollars as the reserve currency forces the U.S. to run persistent trade deficits to supply them. This strengthens the dollar and boosts import power but hollows out the domestic industrial base. A future decline in dollar demand would create a painful economic transition.

Contrary to its goals, the U.S. trade war has resulted in self-isolation. Data shows the U.S. is the only country buying less from China, while U.S. allies and developing nations have increased their trade, leading to a record $1 trillion surplus for China. This highlights a strategic miscalculation in U.S. foreign trade policy.

Despite a popular bearish narrative, the U.S. Dollar has a strong bullish case. The U.S. economy is accelerating while Europe and Japan face stagflation, and record short positioning creates fuel for a squeeze. The argument is that U.S. stocks are essentially levered U.S. dollars, and relative strength will attract capital.

Tariffs are a direct tax paid by the domestic importer, period. This functions as a significant, unacknowledged fiscal tightening by massively increasing the corporate tax bill. This drain on the economy is a primary driver of the current recessionary impulse, contrary to political narratives.

The U.S. economy's ability to consume more than it produces is not due to superior productivity but to the dollar's role as the world's reserve currency. This allows the U.S. to export paper currency and import real goods, a privilege that is now at risk as the world diversifies away from the dollar.

The negative economic impact of tariffs was weaker than forecast because key transmission channels failed to materialize. A lack of foreign retaliation, a depreciating dollar that boosted exports, and a surprisingly strong stock market prevented the anticipated tightening of financial conditions.

Officials at IMF meetings expressed surprise at how little the Trump administration has focused on foreign exchange rates. There is a growing expectation that this could change next year, with a renewed focus on the dollar if the US trade deficit fails to normalize, creating a latent political risk.

During episodes of US government dysfunction, such as shutdowns, the dollar tends to weaken against alternative reserve assets. The concurrent strength in gold and Bitcoin provides tangible market validation for the 'dollar debasement' thesis, suggesting investors are actively seeking havens from perceived fiscal mismanagement.

Recessionary risks are higher in Canada and Europe than in the U.S. This weakness doesn't drag the U.S. down; instead, it triggers capital flight into U.S. assets for safety. This flow strengthens the dollar and reinforces the American economy, creating a cycle where U.S. strength feeds on others' fragility.

The US dollar's recent slide is not just due to a pro-risk environment. Markets are also pricing in the government reopening, which involves running down the Treasury General Account (TGA). This action is expected to inject significant liquidity into money markets, placing short-term downward pressure on the dollar.