At KeyToFinancialTrends, we see the resumption of the Federal Reserve’s rate-cutting cycle as a turning point for global investors’ currency strategies. In September, the Fed cut its benchmark rate by 25 basis points to a range of 4.00–4.25%, signaling further easing ahead. For foreign funds, this not only reduces the cost of hedging U.S. dollar assets but also creates an incentive to step up protection as the American currency weakens.
In 2025, the ICE Dollar Index has fallen nearly 10%. We note that the main driver has been foreign investors, who ramped up currency hedging amid growing concerns about U.S. trade policy and tariffs. In practice, this creates a feedback loop: a weaker dollar increases hedging demand, while the rise in hedging itself puts further downward pressure on the currency.
For years, many institutional players, including pension and sovereign wealth funds, left their U.S. assets unhedged, as the dollar’s strength provided additional returns and portfolio diversification. Now the environment is changing. At KeyToFinancialTrends, we believe the long-term dollar bull trend has broken, and new Fed rate cuts create a window of opportunity for investors to rethink their strategies.
The cost factor is equally important. Hedging, traditionally expensive due to interest-rate differentials between the U.S. and other developed economies, is becoming cheaper. For European investors, who hold more than $8 trillion of the over $30 trillion invested in U.S. equities and bonds, this shift is especially significant. We expect European institutions to become key drivers of the next wave of hedging activity.
The challenge, however, goes beyond the mechanics of FX transactions. Pressure on the dollar is also linked to growing doubts over the Fed’s independence and the predictability of U.S. policymaking. Investors are increasingly pricing political risks into the cost of hedging, which strengthens the case for raising protective positions.
For U.S. equities, the picture looks paradoxical. The S&P 500 has gained 14% year-to-date and is trading near record highs, yet currency effects are eroding part of these returns for foreign investors. At KeyToFinancialTrends, we see the combination of a strong equity market and a weakening dollar as making hedging not merely optional but a necessity for those seeking to balance returns with currency risk.
Our forecast: in the coming months, we expect stronger activity in derivatives and forward markets, which will add further downward pressure on the dollar. The two additional rate cuts anticipated from the Fed in 2025 could firmly anchor the trend toward higher hedging ratios. We recommend that institutional investors increase their hedged allocations now, before the cost of protection spikes amid potential market stress.
At Key To Financial Trends, we believe a new phase is emerging for global portfolios: the dollar is no longer the universal safe-haven asset-it increasingly requires protection itself.
