Leaders | Biting the hand that funds

How a dollar crisis would unfold

If investors keep selling American assets, a grim fate awaits the world economy

A screaming figure whose head is made from a bag with a dollar sign on it
image: Pete Ryan

THE DOLLAR is meant to be a source of safety. Lately, however, it has been a cause of fear. Since its peak in mid-January the greenback has fallen by over 9% against a basket of major currencies. Two-fifths of that fall has happened since April 1st, even as the yield on ten-year Treasuries has crept up by 0.2 percentage points. That mix of rising yields and a falling currency is a warning sign: if investors are fleeing even though returns are up, it must be because they think America has become more risky. Rumours are rife that big foreign asset managers are dumping greenbacks.

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