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Donald Trump’s latest trade threats pushed the dollar to its lowest level in three years on Thursday as rising worries over trade and geopolitics piled fresh pressure on the currency.
The dollar was dragged lower after the US president told reporters he would send letters to trading partners outlining new tariff rates in the next couple of weeks, as the end of the 90-day pause on so-called “reciprocal” levies approaches next month.
The greenback fell 0.8 per cent against a basket of its trading partners, including the pound and the euro. The move means the currency has fallen past the low it hit in the wake of Trump’s “liberation day” tariff blitz in early April and to its weakest level since March 2022.
“[Trump’s] comment certainly points to renewed escalation in trade tensions ahead of the official deadline date,” said Derek Halpenny, an analyst at MUFG.
Investors were also digesting a trade truce between US and China announced on Wednesday, and rising tensions between the US, Israel and Iran, with the Trump administration authorising military personnel to leave the Middle East.
“We’ll see what happens,” Trump told reporters on Wednesday. “They [Iran] can’t have a nuclear weapon, very simple.”
While trade tensions have continued to weigh on the dollar, stocks have since rebounded from their April plunge, with the S&P 500 closing in on a fresh all-time high in recent days. Futures markets indicated a 0.5 per cent slide for the Wall Street benchmark on Thursday.
Stocks also fell in Europe, with the Stoxx Europe 600 down 0.9 per cent.
Lower-than-expected US inflation on Wednesday has also weighed on the dollar this week by opening the door for faster interest-rate cuts from the Federal Reserve. By contrast, signals from the European Central Bank last week that it may be close to the end of its rate cutting cycle have pushed the euro higher.
Futures markets are fully pricing in two quarter-point rate cuts from the Fed this year.
The moves compounded a slide in the dollar that has taken it down about 10 per cent this year as economic worries over the trade war mix with concerns over a rising deficit and signs that some investors are reducing their exposure to US assets. A budgetary provision that would allow the government to raise taxes on foreign investments has added to the unease.
“Foreigners are selling every rally in the dollar on policy chaos, ballooning debt and other threats to their investments,” said Trevor Greetham, head of multi-asset at Royal London Asset Management.
Weakness in the greenback “has much more room to run”, said Vasileios Gkionakis, senior economist at Aviva Investors. “The shift away from US exceptionalism is driving the US risk premium higher and is weighing on the value of the dollar.”