The first full day of financial market trading in U.S. President Donald Trump's second term in office is set to get off to a strong start on Tuesday, with Trump's seemingly more measured approach to tariffs giving investor sentiment an instant shot in the arm.
Trump issued a broad trade memo on Monday that stopped short of immediately imposing new tariffs on key trading partners, something he had previously indicated he would do on his first day in office. Instead, trade relationships with China, Canada and Mexico will be assessed and reviewed before he decides what steps to take.
The U.S. stock and bond markets were closed for Martin Luther King Jr. Day on Monday, but FX markets were open, and the dollar's steep fall across the board reflected the relief among investors that Trump appears to be dialing down the tariff rhetoric in favor of a less belligerent approach.
Even if it turns out to be only temporary.
The dollar index slumped 1%, its biggest decline since August. The dollar may have been primed for a fall, going by hedge fund positioning - the latest Commodity Futures Trading Commission data shows funds last week held a net long dollar position against a range of currencies worth $35 billion last week, the biggest in nine years.
The dollar had rallied around 10% since September alongside the surge in U.S. Treasury yields of more than 100 basis points, a tightening of financial conditions that hit Asian and emerging markets particularly hard. A pause or reversal should ease that squeeze.