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A risk-off cascade often starts in foreign exchange. A spike in FX volatility is a leading indicator of stress, which then transmits to credit markets via widening spreads, signaling a potential carry trade unwind and a scramble for US dollars.

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The EM FX risk appetite index, which has a strong track record of predicting downturns, is at an extreme level, suggesting a correction. However, the model was trained during a dollar-bullish cycle and may be misinterpreting the current pro-cyclical, bearish-dollar environment, potentially making its contrarian signal less reliable this time.

The dollar's decline, particularly in April, was not driven by investors divesting from US assets. Instead, it was caused by investors with large, unhedged dollar exposures belatedly adding hedges. This involves selling dollars in the spot or forward markets, creating downward pressure without actual asset sales.

The success of the current EM FX carry trade isn't driven by wide interest rate differentials, which are not historically high. Instead, the strategy is performing well because a resilient global growth environment is suppressing currency volatility, making it profitable to hold high-yielding currencies against low-yielders.

Don't wait for public credit spreads to blow out as a warning sign. In a system where sovereign debt is the primary vulnerability and corporates are easily bailed out, credit spreads have become a coincident, not leading, indicator. The real leverage risk is hidden in private credit.

The cost to convert local currencies into dollar-backed stablecoins often includes a premium over the official FX rate. This "stablecoin access premium" is highly correlated with FX volatility, suggesting the newer stablecoin market is already taking pricing cues from the larger, more mature FX market.

Improving risk-adjusted carry in intra-EMU spreads is deceptive, driven by falling volatility, not higher returns. This creates a 'carry trap' where a small one-standard-deviation widening can erase one to two months of gains, highlighting the risk in currently crowded positions.

Contrary to the historical norm where volatility rises with a strengthening dollar (risk-off), the market is now experiencing higher volatility as the dollar falls. This unusual 'dollar down, vol up' dynamic suggests a pro-cyclical market backdrop and has major ramifications for how FX options and risk reversals are priced.

The U.S. dollar's decline is forecast to persist into H1 2026, driven by more than just policy shifts. As U.S. interest rate advantages narrow relative to the rest of the world, hedging costs for foreign investors decrease. This provides a greater incentive for investors to hedge their currency exposure, leading to increased dollar selling.

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.

The 'yen carry trade' relies on a weak yen. When the US Treasury signals it may defend the yen (a 'rate check'), it acts like a nuclear threat to traders. This forces a mass scramble to repay yen-denominated loans before their cost skyrockets, creating a violent buying panic and a potential 'margin call for the entire world.'