‘Dedollarization’ is dead: Investors discount Trump’s dramas as they pile into U.S. assets https://fortune.com/2026/01/16/stocks-dedollarization-is-dead-trump-us-assets/ Posted by FUSeekMe69
Intelligent_Teach247 on January 16, 2026 12:50 pm Why would investors want to be in a lowering interest rate environment? I am confused.
CheetahReasonable275 on January 16, 2026 1:03 pm They are afraid. US Dollar is getting destroyed. When they can not get buyers for the national debt, everything collapses.
kaizenkaos on January 16, 2026 1:14 pm We really need to pull out all our cash. No more of this fractional banking shit.
stevenip on January 16, 2026 1:23 pm Are precious metals trading on the US stock exchange considered US assets?
Canuck-overseas on January 16, 2026 1:24 pm USD is falling, making stocks cheaper. US stocks will continue going up.
thinkscout on January 16, 2026 1:36 pm Doesn’t matter. The US still isn’t going to be able to compete with Asia in the next couple of decades.
Foolgazi on January 16, 2026 1:40 pm Crap article. The fact that US-based securities are still doing well does not indicate investors are gaining faith in the dollar.
burgonies on January 16, 2026 1:44 pm It’s silly to call a 9% decline in USD a “harsh haircut” while the S&P is up 16% over that same time period.
9 Comments
Delete this before the anti-trumpers see this, please.
Why would investors want to be in a lowering interest rate environment? I am confused.
They are afraid. US Dollar is getting destroyed. When they can not get buyers for the national debt, everything collapses.
We really need to pull out all our cash. No more of this fractional banking shit.
Are precious metals trading on the US stock exchange considered US assets?
USD is falling, making stocks cheaper. US stocks will continue going up.
Doesn’t matter. The US still isn’t going to be able to compete with Asia in the next couple of decades.
Crap article. The fact that US-based securities are still doing well does not indicate investors are gaining faith in the dollar.
It’s silly to call a 9% decline in USD a “harsh haircut” while the S&P is up 16% over that same time period.