The U.S. dollar is on course for its worst first half year since 1973.

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Morning Bid U.S.

What matters in U.S. and global markets today

 

By Mike Dolan, Editor-At-Large, Financial Industry and Financial Markets

 

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The U.S. dollar is on course for its worst first half year since 1973, as it plummeted again on Thursday amid rising expectations for Federal Reserve easing and statements from President Donald Trump about his pick for the next Fed chair.

I'll discuss this and the rest of the market news below, and then in today’s deep dive, I discuss what the Bank of England’s rethink of its bond-selling strategy may signal about long-term yields and balance sheets across the developed markets.

I’d love to hear from you, so please reach out to me at mike.dolan@thomsonreuters.com. 

 
 

Data refreshes every time you open this email. For more U.S. market news, click here. Please send any feedback to morningbid@thomsonreuters.com.

 

Today's Market Minute

  • U.S. President Donald Trump said on Wednesday he would likely seek a commitment from Iran to end its nuclear ambitions at talks next week and credited U.S. strikes on Iran with bringing a swift end to the war between Israel and Tehran.
  • In their rush to retain President Trump's support for NATO, the alliance's European members have promised to more than double the amount of wealth they set aside for military spending.
  • Asian stocks wobbled and the dollar was under pressure on Thursday as the prospect of an early appointment of the next Federal Reserve Chair by President Donald Trump stoked concerns over the independence and credibility of the U.S. central bank.
  • Much of the "de-dollarization" debate has focused on foreign exposure to U.S. securities like stocks and bonds. But ROI columnist Jamie McGeever warns investors should not ignore foreign direct investment flows, the traditionally sticky capital that may also be sending out warning signals.
  • Asia's imports of crude oil rose in the first half of 2025 as a surge in June arrivals overcame a soft start in the early months of the year. Read the latest from ROI columnist Clyde Russell. 
 

Dollar plunges as Trump pummels Powell

The dollar's index against the most traded world currencies has now lost more than 10% in 2025 to date just as the half-year mark approaches next week and it is now at its weakest in three years. 

That is the index's worst six month performance since 1991, and it is its worst first half since the start of the floating exchange rate era 52 years ago.

The euro soared above $1.17 to its highest in almost four years, the Swiss franc hit its strongest in a decade and sterling hit its best level since 2021.

The dollar slide has snowballed since Trump's trade war unfolded in April amid worries about foreign investor flight and uncertainty about U.S. policymaking. A revival of Europe's economic outlook has been the flipside, spurred by a ratcheting up of regional defense spending and Germany's dramatic fiscal boost.

Wary of the inflationary effects of tariff increases, the Fed has held the line on interest rates while other central banks continued easing. But speculation about a resumption of rate cuts this year has mounted again this month - with particular focus on what happens after Fed Chair Powell's term ends next May.

The trigger for the overnight dollar lurch lower appears to have been Trump's latest salvo against Powell and his reluctance to back a rate cut now - a stance the Fed boss underlined in congressional testimonies this week.

But attending the NATO summit in The Hague on Wednesday, where the alliance pledged to lift defense spending toward 5% of GDP over the next decade, Trump said he would soon name his picks to replace what he called a "terrible" Powell next year.

With splits emerging among the Fed policymakers about how soon to start cutting rates again, markets have started to stack up easing bets amid reports of a Trump-appointed "shadow" Fed chair emerging over the remainder of the year to undermine Powell's authority. 

Fears for Fed policymaking independence from politics are now rife. 

Fed futures pricing now expects rates to fall by 137 basis points to 3% by early 2027, 30 bps more than it priced in one month ago. There is now a one-in-four chance of a cut as soon as July and some 63 bps of Fed cuts expected by year-end.

Negotiating another heavy week of debt sales, two and 10-year Treasury yields fell to near two-month lows on Thursday.

The Fed also unveiled a proposal on Wednesday that would overhaul how much capital large global banks must hold against relatively low-risk assets, as part of a bid to boost participation in U.S. Treasury markets. That lifted bank stocks.

The full reversal of recent oil price gains this week as the Israel-Iran ceasefire holds added to a more benign inflation picture and U.S. crude is back registering losses of 20% year-on-year.

Trump said on Wednesday the U.S. had not given up its maximum pressure on Iran, but signaled a potential easing in enforcement of restrictions on the sales of Iranian oil to help the country rebuild. Talks with Iran are due next week.

Stock markets were firmer across the world, with MSCI's all-country index eking out a new record high and the Nasdaq 100 hitting a new record on Wednesday. 

The S&P 500 is now within 1% of its all-time high too as the second-quarter earnings season nears next month. Although it ended flat on Wednesday, futures were higher ahead of Thursday's bell.

Thursday sees a stream of economic updates on May trade and weekly jobs, with this week's consumer confidence and housing updates readings showing notable weakness.

In the backdrop, markets are watching for the possible passing of Trump's fiscal bill and debt ceiling rise in Congress by the July 4 holiday and then early next month sees the spotlight falling on an expiry of his 90-day pause on April's "reciprocal" tariff hikes. 

With no further bilateral trade deals announced of late, speculation is rising about an extension of the pause.

 Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, meantime, extended the department's authority to continue extraordinary cash management measures to keep from breaching the federal debt ceiling by nearly a month, until July 24.

Elsewhere, oil giant Shell said it had not bid for BP and was not actively considering such a move, adding it was bound by UK regulations which mean such a statement banned it from making a bid for BP for the next six months.

The Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday that Shell was in talks to acquire BP.

 

BoE echoes central banks' long bond sensitivity

Central banks sense that their once-bloated balance sheets are closing in on the fabled 'steady state', meaning they can concentrate solely on setting interest rates rather than fretting about the monetary effects of adding or shedding bonds.

A curious event at the Bank of England this week was the latest sign of G4 sensitivity to shaky investor demand for so-called long-duration government debt, suggesting policymakers are going to start scrutinizing the effects of their balance sheet activity more closely.

In a parliamentary testimony on Tuesday, Bank of England governor Andrew Bailey said the upcoming annual review of the BoE's balance sheet rundown - or 'quantitative tightening' policy - would be "interesting" this year in light of the sharply steeper UK yield curve. 

What's more, he added that central bank reserves in the financial system could reach the top end of estimates from banks for their 'neutral' level during the second half of 2026.

Bailey's deputy Dave Ramsden - who oversees the annual QT review - later concurred with the governor without giving details away, adding "movements at the long end of the curve were a particular focus for us more generally in the Bank."

Partly drawn into the slipstream of sharp moves in long-term U.S. Treasuries, as Donald Trump returned to the White House this year and upended trade and diplomatic policies, long-dated British gilt yields have been on edge all year too. 

Even after two quarter-point cuts in BoE policy rates since January, 30-year UK government borrowing costs are 15 basis points higher on the year - and were almost 50bp higher on the year at one point during a turbulent April when they hit their highest in 27 years.

 

Graphics are produced by Reuters.

The result has been a near doubling of the yield curve gap between 2- and 30-year gilts - the steepest curve in almost eight years.

 

Britain has its own home-grown debt worries, memories of a fiscal shock three years ago and limited borrowing room under the current Labour government's own rules at a time of mounting spending demands from defence to health.

There's also a complicated dance between the BoE's bond holdings, how they are funded with interest on commercial bank reserves and the extent to which government is on the hook for losses incurred.