The decline in the US Dollar against individual currencies looks remarkable

Are we heading for more US Dollar pain?

In partnership with

GLOBAL MARKETS INVESTOR’S PORTFOLIO IS 🔥UP +93%🔥SINCE JANUARY 2024

DURING THE MARCH-APRIL 2025 MARKET TURMOIL, MAJOR US INDEXES FELL NEARLY 20%, WHILE THE GMI PORTFOLIO GAINED OVER 5%, FIND OUT HOW BELOW:

The Swedish Krona has surged +24.99% against the Greenback since January 20, 2025, the largest gain among major currencies.

At the same time, the Mexican Peso has jumped +19.01%, and the Swiss Franc has soared +18.19%.

Meanwhile, the Euro has risen +14.93%, the British Pound has gained +11.74%, and even the Japanese Yen has increased +1.88%.

The Year-End Moves No One’s Watching

Markets don’t wait — and year-end waits even less.

In the final stretch, money rotates, funds window-dress, tax-loss selling meets bottom-fishing, and “Santa Rally” chatter turns into real tape. Most people notice after the move.

Elite Trade Club is your morning shortcut: a curated selection of the setups that still matter this year — the headlines that move stocks, catalysts on deck, and where smart money is positioning before New Year’s. One read. Five minutes. Actionable clarity.

If you want to start 2026 from a stronger spot, finish 2025 prepared. Join 200K+ traders who open our premarket briefing, place their plan, and let the open come to them.

By joining, you’ll receive Elite Trade Club emails and select partner insights. See Privacy Policy.

Why is the US Dollar weakening?

1. Rising US policy and fiscal risks are eroding confidence in the currency.

Unpredictable policymaking, pressure on the Federal Reserve, concerns over ever-rising US debt, and political polarization have pushed traders to price in a weaker greenback.

2. A surging yen and stronger global currencies are dragging the Dollar lower.

Hints of Japanese intervention, Fed rate-checks on the yen, and resilient European currencies have fueled broad Dollar selling and pushed major peers higher.

3. Shrinking growth and interest-rate differentials are reducing the Dollar’s advantage.

Global growth expectations are improving and overseas stock markets are outperforming, pushing investors toward higher-return foreign equities, which reduces demand for the greenback.

At the same time, markets expect more rate cuts in the US, making foreign assets more attractive and weakening the appeal of Dollar-denominated holdings.

Has the short US Dollar trade become overcrowded?

If you find it informative and helpful, consider a paid subscription or become a Founding Member, and follow me on Twitter or Nostr: