NEW YORK – President Donald Trump’s tariff threats once again lifted the US dollar last week, but a growing group of investors is betting against the greenback amid signs the US economy is cooling and on concern a trade war will weaken it further.
The expanding chorus of dollar bears includes asset managers Invesco and Columbia Threadneedle and hedge fund Mount Lucas Management. On Wall Street, Morgan Stanley and Societe Generale are warning clients that going long on the dollar is an overcrowded trade that may not hold up.
They are looking past the daily gyrations sparked by tariff announcements and, as they see it, the narrative around the greenback is only darkening. Instead of deriving support from the prospect that import levies could reignite inflation and keep interest rates elevated, there is now concern that all the uncertainty around tariffs risks undermining an economy that already shows signs of cooling.
The result is that market expectations for Federal Reserve interest rate cuts have intensified, diminishing the dollar’s appeal.
Additionally, the aura of US economic exceptionalism that underpinned the dollar’s 7.1 per cent surge in the last quarter is dimming as investors ponder Mr Trump’s domestic and foreign policies, which include efforts to slash federal expenses and broker a peace deal between Russia and Ukraine.
“I don’t think he can send the dollar much higher, because it’s really expensive,” said Mr Kit Juckes, head of currency strategy at Societe Generale in London, referring to the US President. “But can he send it lower? He absolutely can, if he damages the US economy.”
Market peril
The world’s primary reserve currency is now almost 2 per cent below the post-election peak it reached before Mr Trump’s inauguration, amid a risk-on wave that also boosted stocks and Treasury yields.
Last week drove home the peril of going short on the dollar in the current environment. The greenback surged on Feb 27, paring its February decline, after Mr Trump said that 25 per cent tariffs on Mexico and Canada would take effect March 4. He also said he would impose an additional 10 per cent tax on Chinese imports.
The US currency extended gains on Feb 28 in the aftermath of a heated exchange between President Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, leading to the collapse of a peace agreement with Russia and a potential deal on critical minerals. In an interview after the Oval Office bust-up, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent reiterated that tariffs were likely to generate substantial revenue.
Still, the renewed focus on European defence could end up buoying the region’s currencies against the dollar. The euro strengthened in early Asia trading on March 3 as European leaders gathered to discuss defence spending hikes and the securing of Ukraine after any potential US-brokered ceasefire.
“Beyond its geopolitical impact, this initiative provides reassurance to markets by reducing uncertainty and reinforcing investor confidence,” said Mr Eli Mizrahi, managing partner of Targa 5 Advisors in Geneva. “A strong and lasting security framework for Ukraine can help support economic resilience and long-term stability in Europe.”
Headlines on tariffs have tended to help the dollar because, generally speaking, they make imports more costly, potentially hurting demand for those goods and reducing the need for the currencies to buy them.
At the same time, investors got a reminder last week of the headwinds that the US economy is facing as pending home sales slumped to a record low and jobless claims rose to the highest in 2025, partly due to job cut announcements at federal agencies.
It is that backdrop that has bears convinced they are leaning in the right direction.
For a period of time, the market priced “only the positive side” of the administration’s policies, said Mr David Aspell, co-chief investment officer at Mount Lucas, which has US$1.7 billion (S$2.3 billion) under management. “You also need to fully price things that they’re trying to do that are going to be growth-negative.”
The fund is short on the dollar versus peers, including the pound and the Mexican peso, as the post-election enthusiasm over US growth fades.
Invesco, meanwhile, flipped to underweight on the dollar from overweight a few weeks ago on better-than-forecast data out of Europe.
Bonds affected
The shift in sentiment is rippling through the Treasury market too. Traders have driven two-year yields to the lowest since October as expectations build for deeper Fed easing.
A break lower in yields on additional signs of economic weakness is “the dollar bear case”, said Mr George Catrambone, head of fixed income at DWS Americas. “For a meaningful decline in the dollar, you need to see the market price in more cuts, but it will ultimately also depend on what other central banks are doing.”
For now, traders see around nearly 0.7 percentage point of Fed rate reductions by year end, compared with about 0.85 percentage point for the European Central Bank.
This differential helps explain why the market, overall, still has a bias towards greenback strength. In futures, for example, speculators such as hedge funds are still leaning towards dollar gains even after trimming bullish bets to the lowest since late October.
But the great unknown, of course, is how tariffs will play out.
Goldman Sachs strategists expect more dollar gains should sweeping levies ultimately come to pass, and they said in a note on Feb 26 that the market was underpricing that risk. Meanwhile, Morgan Stanley, argued last week that the dollar’s major peers had become less sensitive to tariff announcements in recent weeks, which could extend the US currency’s slide.
Investors, for their part, do not seem to see tariff-fuelled turbulence ending any time soon.
“Volatility is likely to increase, but it is not clear to me that the US dollar comes out winning,” said Mr Alessio de Longis at Invesco. BLOOMBERG
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