The U.S. dollar fell against other major currencies on Monday, giving up some of the previous week’s gains, as markets weighed the outlook for President Donald Trump’s tariff policy and its potential to constrict growth and unleash inflation.
The greenback starts the week on the back foot after Trump said on Friday that he planned to double duties on imported steel and aluminum to 50% from Wednesday, and as Beijing hit back against accusations it violated an agreement on critical minerals shipments.
China’s Commerce Ministry said on Monday the charges were “groundless,” and promised to take unspecified forceful measures to safeguard its interests. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Sunday Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping will likely have a call soon, and “this will be ironed out.”
The dollar dropped 0.8% to 142.85 yen as of 0821 GMT, giving back some of its more than 1% rally from last week.
The euro gained 0.66% to $1.1422 to its highest since late April, while sterling advanced 0.67% to $1.3549.
Trump’s latest tariff announcement did little damage to top steel exporter Canada’s dollar, which instead hit its highest in nearly eight months versus the dollar. It was last up 0.5% at 1.3675.
A broader index, which measures the greenback against six major peers eased 0.6% and at 98.751 and was just shy of its April 22 low.
Weak dollar reprises its role as ‘carry’ trade funder
“U.S. protectionist trade policies have raised the risk the U.S. economy enters a period of stagflation which can further undermine the dollar,” said Elias Haddad, senior markets strategist at Brown Brothers Harriman.
Recession worries
The U.S. dollar has been whipsawed for weeks by Trump’s on-again-off-again trade war, and investors have been questioning the currency’s safe-haven status as a flare-up in tensions stokes worries of a potential U.S. recession.
The dollar has fallen about 5% against major peers since the April 2 “Liberation Day” tariffs and about 2% in the last two weeks, when Trump threatened 50% levies on Europe and then postponed them.
Last week, the greenback got a bit of respite, rising 0.3% after talks with the European Union got back on track and a U.S. trade court blocked the bulk of Trump’s tariffs on the grounds that he overstepped his authority.
An appeals court reinstated the duties a day later, and Trump’s administration said it had other avenues to implement the levies if it loses in court, but many analysts said it showed there were still checks in place on the president’s power.
Goldman Sachs said it expected the 10% tariff floor for major trading partners to remain, in addition to sectoral tariffs.
“The risk remains that if tariffs are impeded, attention may shift to other ways of raising revenues which may be even more negative for the dollar,” Goldman analysts said in a note.
Fiscal worries have also given rise to a broad “Sell America” theme that has seen dollar assets from stocks to Treasury bonds dropping in recent months.
Those concerns come into particular focus this week as the Senate starts considering Trump’s sweeping tax cut and spendingbill, which will add an estimated $3.8 trillion to the federal government’s $36.2 trillion in debt over the next decade.
Many senators have already said the bill will need major revisions, and Trump said he welcomed changes.
The fate of section 899 of the bill could be crucial, according to Barclays analysts.
“S899 would give the U.S. free rein to tax companies and investors from countries deemed to have ‘unfair foreign taxes’ (and) could be seen as a tax on the U.S. capital account at a time when investor nervousness towards U.S. assets has grown,” they said in a research report.
“Actively reducing foreigners’ total return on their U.S. investments would dent inflows and weigh on the dollar, all else equal,” Barclays analysts said.
“While dollar sentiment/positioning remains close to extreme negativity, the path ahead is by no means clear cut.”
Elsewhere, the Australian dollar added 0.70% to $0.64 and the New Zealand dollar rose 0.85% to $0.60.
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