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Last year's dollar weakness was driven by two factors no longer present: softening US data and outperforming European growth. With European data and equities now cratering, the narrative is shifting back to US exceptionalism. This suggests any dollar weakness from geopolitical de-escalation will be short-lived, with a return to strength likely.
Unlike emerging markets where pro-cyclical trades are crowded, positioning data shows the bearish US dollar view is not widely held in G10 currencies. This lack of a broad consensus short means there is less risk of a sharp deleveraging, giving pro-cyclical G10 FX more room to appreciate against the dollar.
While the idea of US growth re-acceleration is driving dollar strength, it's not the only story. Recent positive surprises in European PMI data and upgraded Chinese GDP forecasts suggest broader global growth resilience. This breadth should help cap the US dollar's rally and may promote weakness against other currencies.
Despite an equity rotation story away from the US that should support a weaker dollar, the currency is overshooting. This discrepancy is attributed to geopolitical uncertainties related to Iran. Without this risk premium, the dollar would likely already be weaker, indicating underlying bearish pressure on the currency.
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.
Despite talk of de-dollarization, the US remains the only market offering superior returns due to its productivity advantage. Recent ex-US outperformance was a short-term anomaly based on perceived geopolitical risks in the US, not a fundamental shift. When seeking returns, capital must ultimately flow to the US.
Despite conditions that typically strengthen the US dollar (rising oil prices, war), its recent performance has been weak. This suggests a structural erosion of its safe-haven status and global dominance, potentially due to declining use in global trade, which has long-term inflationary implications for the US.
Systematic growth momentum signals turning negative across a wide set of 28 countries acts as a powerful, counter-cyclical indicator. This broad-based global economic weakening points towards relative US dollar strength, providing a systematic justification for a long dollar position.
The classic "stocks down, dollar up" correlation is weakening. A J.P. Morgan model shows that relative US equity underperformance (dollar-negative) is currently offsetting the effect of an outright global equity decline (dollar-positive). This dynamic leads to only modest moves in the dollar despite stock market stress.
The U.S. Dollar's value has been driven less by conventional factors like growth expectations and more by an unconventional "risk premium." This premium reflects market reactions to policy uncertainty, such as talk of FX intervention or tariffs. This has caused the dollar to weaken far more than interest rate differentials alone would suggest, creating a significant valuation gap.
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.