US dollar moves have stayed tied to US macro data and Federal Reserve rate expectations, despite fresh de-dollarisation headlines and volatility in AI-linked equities. Softer US inflation and AI sector concerns have added pressure to the dollar.
A long-running reserve shift has continued over two decades, with global FX reserves moving away from the USD towards gold and smaller reserve currencies such as AUD, CAD and CHF. Even so, near-term direction has remained linked to US economic momentum and what it implies for the Fed’s easing cycle.
Usd Weakness And Global Crosscurrents
Early in 2026, US equities and the USD have lagged, while stronger non‑US equity performance and better global growth prospects have supported a softer USD tone. The article notes this softness has been most evident versus commodity currencies such as AUD and NZD and higher-yielding emerging market FX.
Resilient US growth has been presented as a factor that may limit further USD declines. If wage and inflation pressures keep easing, long-end Treasuries may regain hedge value against growth risks, which could support the USD’s safe-haven role.
The article says it was produced using an AI tool and reviewed by an editor. It also describes FXStreet Insights Team as journalists curating market observations with added internal and external analyst input.
The US dollar is being driven lower by economic data, not just headlines about de-dollarisation. We saw this with the latest January CPI report, which came in at 2.8% and missed expectations, fueling bets on earlier Federal Reserve rate cuts. This reinforces the dollar weakness we’ve observed since the end of 2025.
Positioning For Data Driven Volatility
This suggests we should consider strategies that benefit from a weaker dollar, particularly against commodity currencies. The Australian and New Zealand dollars look strong, especially after recent Chinese industrial data showed a rebound that supports commodity prices. Buying call options on the AUD/USD pair could be a way to position for further upside.
However, we believe the dollar’s decline will be limited, so overly aggressive bearish bets are risky. The US economy is still showing resilience, with the final Q4 2025 GDP growth coming in at a solid 2.5%. This underlying strength could temper the pace of Fed cuts and put a floor under the dollar.
Given the focus on data releases, we expect volatility to pick up around key announcements like the upcoming payrolls report. Traders could use straddles on major pairs like EUR/USD to play these potential price swings. We are also watching long-term Treasuries, as falling inflation could make them an attractive hedge again, which would indirectly support the dollar’s safe-haven status.