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Why Investors Are Getting the US Debasement Trade All Wrong

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Many investors have recently embraced what they call the “US debasement trade”, betting that the United States dollar is weakening and that inflationary pressures or fiscal weakness will erode its value and harm U.S. financial assets. But according to financial strategist Joachim Klement, investors may be reading the situation incorrectly and focusing on the wrong risk.

Over the past year the U.S. dollar has fallen roughly 10 per cent against other major currencies, and gold prices have surged, reinforcement for some who argue that America’s currency is losing its strength. Yet Klement points out that a key market measure known as the “convenience yield” still suggests strong investor preference for holding actual dollars rather than synthetic dollar exposures. That implies continued confidence in the greenback itself.

In contrast, comparisons of convenience yields between U.S. Treasury securities and safer alternatives like German Bunds show a long‑term shift in perceived risk. For about 15 years, the convenience yield for U.S. Treasuries has been lower than for German government bonds, indicating growing concerns about the safety or desirability of holding U.S. government debt.

Klement argues that this pattern reflects persistent U.S. fiscal deficits — historically exceeding 4 per cent of GDP since the early 2010s — rather than a wholesale collapse in confidence in the dollar as a currency. In this telling, the greater risk lies in Treasuries themselves, not in the dollar.

Recent changes in Treasury convenience yields also show that the perceived gap between U.S. and German government finances may be narrowing, suggesting that fears of imminent fiscal breakdown may be overstated. At the same time, investors may not be fully pricing in potential risks to Treasuries — for example, from the loss of tariff revenues amounting to roughly $100 billion to $130 billion annually if certain legal challenges strike them down.

Rather than signalling an imminent collapse of the dollar, the current market behavior could be highlighting nuanced shifts in where investors choose to hold risk. While gold and other so‑called safe‑haven assets have attracted attention, strong demand for actual dollars in everyday liquidity needs and global financial flows continues to underpin the currency’s central role.

This analysis challenges the view that the United States is facing a straightforward debasement of its currency and financial standing. Instead, it suggests that markets may be exaggerating certain trends, and that the true vulnerabilities lie more in long‑term debt dynamics than in the dollar’s immediate purchasing power.

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