Monday, December 16, 2024

Dollar’s Trump-fueled gains face a reality check late next year

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(Bloomberg) — Wall Street is starting to sour on the dollar as President-elect Donald Trump’s policies and the Federal Reserve’s interest-rate cuts will likely put pressure on the greenback in the latter portion of 2025.

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From Morgan Stanley to JPMorgan Chase, roughly a half dozen sell-side strategists, are now forecasting the world’s reserve currency will peak as early as mid next year before starting to decline, with Societe Generale seeing the ICE US Dollar Index falling 6% at the end of next year.

The dollar has already soared this year, on track for the biggest rally since 2015, thanks to Trump’s victory in the US presidential election and as strong economic data prompted traders to reduce their forecasts for the number of Fed rate cuts next year.

The greenback’s strength has been “stomach churning,” said Kit Juckes, the head of currency strategy at Societe Generale. “We’re driving the price of an asset up to something that is not sustainable over the long-term.”

The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index has risen some 6.3% so far this year, with a good part of those gains coming in the run-up to and since election day in early November. The rally has been fueled by expectations that Trump’s tariffs and tax cuts will fan inflation and complicate the Fed’s mission to lower rates in the months ahead. That’s provided global investors an incentive to shift money to the US.

While Morgan Stanley’s macro and currency strategists including Matthew Hornbach and James Lord see the dollar getting a boost from those threats, ultimately the dollar will dip below current levels by this time next year, they wrote. The combination of falling real rates in the US and improved risk appetite combine for the most bearish of greenback scenarios, they added.

For now, Trump has been ramping up his hawkish rhetoric on trade, most recently sending the Mexican peso and Canadian dollar sliding after he pledged tariffs of 25% on Mexican and Canadian goods over migrant and drugs-related border issues. Earlier this month, Trump took a jab at a group of emerging economies for challenging the dollar’s status as the world’s premier currency.

All of the recent strength in the greenback has led to weakness across non-dollar currencies. The euro fell to a two-year low in November after the US election, nearing parity. MSCI Inc.’s emerging-market currency index now trades at the lowest in four months while China might devalue the yuan to 7.50 next year — a level last seen in 2007 — according to news report last week.

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