De-Dollarization Accelerates: Trump’s Policies Spark Investor Exodus as USD Stability Cracks
The greenback's reign faces its stiffest test yet as political turbulence rattles faith in the world's reserve currency.
Investors are voting with their wallets—and the results are brutal. The latest de-dollarization wave gains momentum as Trump-era policies inject unprecedented volatility into traditional markets. Smart money's already moving elsewhere.
While Washington plays musical chairs with economic policy, crypto markets quietly absorb the capital flight. Bitcoin's 2025 resurgence isn't coincidental—it's hedge funds diversifying away from politically-exposed assets. Gold's rally tells the same story.
Here's the uncomfortable truth: when even pension funds start questioning dollar dominance, the writing's on the wall. The Fed can print money, but it can't print confidence.
Funny how 'stable' currencies become less so when election cycles override fiscal responsibility. Maybe Satoshi had the right idea after all.
Trump’s Policies Are “Shooing” Investors Away
A recent Bloomberg report outlined how Donald Trump is spearheading de-dollarization more than any other factor at the moment. The US president has rattled its allies through consistent tariff hikes, pushing them further away. Alongside that, Trump’s persistent push for rate cuts, as well as his tactics to pursue legal paths for those who oppose his opinions, have taken a toll on the US dollar’s global repute. As a result, the world now wants to maintain a SAFE distance, with foreign investors moving away from the US dollar.
says Stephen Miller, a consultant for GSFM, a unit of Canada’s CI Financial Corp. in Australia.
Per the report, the US president’s desire for a weaker dollar to bolster US manufacturing seems to be a key marker for this stark investor confidence pivot.
Repatriation Of Funds On Cards Now?
The report further stated how the constant US dollar devaluation and fall could trigger a “loop of issues.” This loop can compel investors to repatriate their funds, driving up the compound costs.
At the same time, the current investor pivot could end up favouring alternatives such as gold and Bitcoin that have rallied significantly this year. This phenomenon is also spurring the de-dollarization narrative aggressively ahead.
In addition to this, Bloomberg’s Paul Tudor Jones of macro-hedge fund investing, stated how the US dollar may fall 10% over the next 10 months. The fall may ultimately influence the investor sentiment again, ushering in de-dollarization in full swing.