Finance Tailwind
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Trump’s FX impact: a tale of two terms


One question we’ve been discussing on the reporting desk lately is the difference between US president Donald Trump’s impact on the foreign exchange markets in his current term compared with his first.

Take yourself back eight years and there are some parallels. For example, Trump’s frequent, unpredictable tweets about US trade policy with China in his first term caused several fluctuations in the US dollar/offshore Chinese renminbi exchange rate.

There was also geopolitical turbulence from US foreign policy, such as the missile strike that killed Iranian military commander Qasem Soleimani at the beginning of 2020, sparking concerns of a wider conflict in the Middle East.

But comparing FX volatility during his two terms, taking the Covid-19 pandemic aside, and some stark differences are apparent.

Banks may have to rely more on adaptive market-making tools if these unpredictable market events persist.

Before 2020, years of co-ordinated low interest rates across G10 markets and limited interest in carry trades led to record-low volatility, with significantly less leverage being deployed in FX markets. And even given some of the unpredictable tweets from Trump, volatility was structurally suppressed.

Fast-forward to the present and market conditions are significantly different. The ‘liberation day’ tariff announcements and the subsequent impact on US assets have flipped long-established correlations on their heads. In addition, volatility materially blew out, impacting spreads and liquidity.

Since then, the frequent nature of Trump’s unpredictable social media posts regarding tariffs, the Middle East, and even Fed chair Jerome Powell, have led to exchange rates being incredibly jittery when reacting to the headlines.

When rumours that Trump would fire Jerome Powell begun to circle in mid-July, euro/US dollar spot jumped 1.5% in just 30 minutes. And when those rumours were quashed later that day, the exchange rate reversed all gains as if nothing had happened.

This kind of intraday volatility is an increasing challenge that electronic FX market-makers will have to deal with for the next few years.



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