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Why a Weaker Dollar Is Unlikely to Force Decisive Action From Global Central Banks

Why a weaker dollar won’t force global central banks to act—contrary to popular alarm. Read why patience, size, and liquidity win.

modest dollar driven inflation pressure

Despite the dollar’s recent tumble to four-year lows, the world’s central banks aren’t rushing for the exits. The greenback fell 9.4% in 2025 and kept sliding into early 2026, yet global reserve managers are holding steady rather than making dramatic portfolio shifts. The reason is straightforward: there’s simply no viable alternative. Central banks keep roughly 60% of their reserves in dollars because no other currency offers the same combination of market depth, liquidity, and regulatory stability. The euro remains a distant second, still below its pre-2008 peak of 28%. Meanwhile, the Chinese renminbi lacks the infrastructure needed for major reserve status. When experts say TINA—There Is No Alternative—they mean it quite literally. Reserve diversification happens over decades, not months. Think of it like turning an aircraft carrier rather than a speedboat. These are massive holdings that can’t be repositioned quickly without causing market chaos. Central banks need time to shift their strategies, and current dollar weakness hasn’t reached the threshold that demands urgent action. Interest rate dynamics also favor patience. The Federal Reserve is cutting rates while many other central banks, including those in Europe, England, and Canada, have already lowered theirs. Markets expect two more Fed cuts by the end of 2026. These rate movements matter far more for currency values than reserve composition decisions do. The Fed terminated quantitative tightening on December 1st, further signaling a shift in monetary stance. The dollar’s real effective exchange rate sits well above its long-term average, suggesting natural mean reversion over time. MUFG Research projects a modest 5% decline for 2026, continuing a gradual adjustment rather than a currency crisis. The U.S. budget deficit has shrunk as a percentage of GDP versus last year, alleviating some fiscal concerns. Political risks do create genuine concerns. Unpredictable U.S. foreign policy and questions about Federal Reserve independence have encouraged some diversification discussions. Central banks without independence typically generate persistent inflation, which would erode dollar holdings over time. Yet the United States remains the world’s largest economy with the deepest financial markets. Potential productivity gains from artificial intelligence could even strengthen the dollar by attracting capital inflows. For now, central banks are watching and waiting rather than hitting the panic button. Meanwhile, global trading schedules such as the New York exchanges’ regular hours from 9:30 a.m. ET to 4:00 p.m. ET help maintain the dollar’s central role by concentrating liquidity during predictable windows.

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