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Global Currency Markets Shift as Dollar Weakens Amid Policy Changes

Global Currency Markets Shift as Dollar Weakens Amid Policy Changes

Wed, June 25, 2025

Global Currency Markets Shift as Dollar Weakens Amid Policy Changes

The global currency markets are experiencing significant shifts as the U.S. dollar continues to weaken, influenced by recent policy changes and evolving economic strategies worldwide.

U.S. Dollar Decline

The U.S. dollar has seen a notable decline, with the dollar index down nearly 10%—its steepest first-half drop since 1986. Analysts suggest this trend may reflect long-term structural issues rather than short-term speculation. A Bank of America survey indicates the most significant underweight dollar position among global fund managers in two decades, signaling waning confidence in U.S. assets due to policy concerns and geopolitical shifts. Although “short dollar” is among the most crowded trades, history shows such trends can persist. Speculative shorts on the dollar are not at extreme levels, and the decline continues despite some reduction. Strategists like Amundi’s Vincent Mortier and Carlyle’s Jeff Currie view the shift away from the dollar as part of a broader capital rotation toward European and emerging markets, driven by long-term geopolitical and economic trends. They highlight transitions from asset-light sectors to asset-heavy ones like defense, mirroring previous multi-year global investment shifts. Analysts acknowledge interim corrections are possible, but the broader dollar decline could remain for years. Dollar exit could be crowded for some time

Euro’s Strengthening Position

In response to the dollar’s decline, the euro has gained strength. European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde emphasized enhancing geopolitical credibility, economic resilience, and legal integrity. However, the euro still faces hurdles such as low growth, fragmented capital markets, and a lack of safe assets. The article argues that issuing common European debt—or Eurobonds—is vital for creating a deep and liquid euro-denominated asset market, fostering financial autonomy, reducing funding costs, and encouraging private investment. Economists Olivier Blanchard and Ángel Ubide propose replacing about 25% of national bonds with Eurobonds, funded through dedicated national revenues. This would create a large Eurobond market akin to the US Treasury market, thus increasing the euro’s attractiveness. Additional strategies include consolidating existing EU bonds and even creating an EU sovereign wealth fund to invest in innovation and securitized assets. Despite these compelling economic arguments, political reluctance remains due to fears of risk-sharing. The article stresses that in light of geopolitical and economic challenges, particularly post-pandemic, the creation of a pan-European bond market is not only necessary but urgent. European common debt is the way to topple the dollar

Emerging Markets Attract Investors

A weakening U.S. dollar is revitalizing interest in emerging market local currency debt after a prolonged 14-year period of minimal foreign investment. In recent weeks, these bond funds have experienced record inflows, driven by reduced U.S. dollar strength, lower developed market interest rates, and a global search for higher yields. Though the inflow volumes remain modest, investment is showing promising momentum across major emerging economies like Brazil, Mexico, India, and Indonesia. Returns on local currency bonds have surpassed 10% since the start of the year, significantly outpacing their hard-currency counterparts. Analysts from JPMorgan, Bank of America, and other institutions highlight this trend as a potential turning point, with undervalued emerging market bonds in countries such as South Africa, Turkey, and the Philippines becoming more attractive. This rise marks a tentative shift as international investors begin diversifying away from U.S. assets following years of dollar dominance. While current capital movement is described as a “trickle,” even small reallocations from the vast U.S. markets could have substantial impact on the smaller emerging markets due to their scale and relative valuation. Emerging market local currency debt could end decade-long drought as dollar wanes

China’s Push for Digital Yuan

At the Lujiazui Forum, People’s Bank of China Governor Pan Gongsheng emphasized expanding the use of the digital yuan (e-CNY) and advancing a multi-polar global currency system to reduce dependence on the U.S. dollar. As part of this initiative, China will establish an international e-CNY operations center in Shanghai and promote the Cross-Border Interbank Payment System (CIPS) for yuan-based international settlements. Pan criticized current cross-border financial infrastructures as inefficient and politically vulnerable, advocating instead for digital alternatives. Six foreign banks, including Standard Bank and First Abu Dhabi Bank, have agreed to adopt CIPS, marking a key step in China’s ambition for broader yuan globalization. The push comes amid rising interest in non-dollar assets due to U.S. tariff policy and growing global interest in digital currencies like stablecoins. Chinese regulators also pledged to maintain yuan exchange rate stability and further open China’s financial markets to foreign institutions, positioning them as key contributors to building China’s modern financial system. China talks up digital yuan in push for multi-polar currency system

Africa’s Non-Dollar Payment Systems

Africa is making significant strides in establishing local currency payment systems to reduce dependency on the U.S. dollar and lower trade costs. The Pan-African Payments and Settlements System (PAPSS), operational since 2022, enables direct transactions between African countries in local currencies, substantially cutting transaction costs from up to 30% to just 1%. This system, now active in 15 countries with 150 banks, aims to save $5 billion annually in hard currency. Though these initiatives are driven by economic rather than political motives, they align with similar efforts by countries like China and Russia seeking alternatives to the dollar. However, the efforts face geopolitical resistance, particularly from U.S. President Donald Trump, who has warned of tariffs against nations reducing dollar reliance. Despite this, African leaders, supported by the International Finance Corporation and the G20, emphasize the economic necessity of regional trade and currency systems to alleviate high transaction costs and currency risks for businesses. The growing movement is seen as vital for boosting intra-African trade and economic resilience, even amid global political pressures. Under shadow of Trump warning, Africa pioneers non-dollar payments systems

These developments indicate a dynamic shift in the global currency landscape, with various regions implementing strategies to reduce reliance on the U.S. dollar and promote economic resilience through diversified currency systems.