Dollar Falls to Lowest Since 2022 as Economic Outlook Dims
The dollar fell to the weakest level in three years amid worries over US tariffs and the outlook for the US economy.
The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index slid as much as 0.8% on Thursday to the lowest level since April 2022. The euro jumped to the strongest since 2021, while the British pound advanced to a new three-year high. All currencies in the Group of 10 gained against the greenback.
The latest declines come on the heels of Thursday data that showed US producer price inflation remained muted in May, held down by tame goods and services costs, which together with other data pushed traders to bet on more interest-rate cuts by the Federal Reserve. The Fed is set to hold its next policy meeting on June 18. Earlier in the Thursday session, the dollar came under pressure as President Donald Trump said he would notify trading partners soon of unilateral levies.
“Trump renewed tariff threats are sparking concerns over US economy, which trickles down to increased bets of Fed easing,” said Helen Given, a foreign-exchange trader at Monex Inc., adding that the dollar index could fall 5% to 6% further this year.
Paul Tudor Jones, the founder of macro hedge fund Tudor Investment Corp., said the dollar may be 10% lower a year from now as he expects to see short-term rates to be cut “dramatically” in the next year.
So far in 2025, the dollar is down more than 8% as investors build up bets that Trump’s trade and tax policies will weigh on the economy. Wall Street strategists have been warning that the dollar has more room to fall, aligning themselves with speculative traders tracked by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission who hold some $12.2 billion of wagers tied to the dollar weakening further.
The concern remains that the US could experience a spike in inflation and start sliding toward a recession amid Trump’s sweeping tariffs on imports. This has investors poring over incoming economic data, especially on the labor market, to determine the path of interest rates in the US.
Source : Bloomberg