Just noticed something interesting playing out in the FX markets back in April - the dollar's whole "war dividend" story collapsed way faster than most people expected.



So here's what went down. March was absolutely brutal for dollar shorts. The Bloomberg Dollar Index jumped 2.4% that month, biggest monthly gain since July, all because of Middle East tensions driving safe-haven flows. Classic playbook, right? But then the second negotiations between the US and Iran started looking more serious, and suddenly the whole narrative flipped.

By mid-April, the dollar index had already dropped 1.8% cumulatively with seven straight days of losses. That's a massive swing in just a few weeks. Morgan Stanley's research team basically said it straight up - "the path toward further dollar weakness is widening, not narrowing." They were calling for the euro, yen, and franc to outperform as the safe-haven bid evaporated.

What really caught my attention was watching the hedge fund community's behavior shift. According to their proprietary models, these guys started aggressively increasing short positions as soon as the ceasefire talks gained traction. And I mean aggressively. One trader at Nomura described April 8 as "one of the most aggressive dollar selling days" he'd seen in years, with massive volume across all major G10 pairs in both spot and options.

The options market was screaming it too. Call options on the euro were trading 50% higher volume than puts - people were clearly betting on euro strength and dollar weakness. It wasn't some slow rotation either. The hedge fund community had literally been waiting for an off-ramp from their long dollar positions, and the first real ceasefire announcement gave them exactly that.

Some asset managers like SGMC Capital were pretty explicit about it - they'd built up bearish dollar positions during the March strength specifically because they knew once the geopolitical premium came out, the dollar would get hit. They were shorting it against the Aussie, Mexican peso, and Brazilian real.

Here's the thing though: even with all this dollar selling, there's this underlying consensus forming that we're only seeing the beginning. JPMorgan put it bluntly in their client note - "the dollar seems to be coming out of this conflict in a worse state." Kenneth Rogoff, the former IMF chief economist, was even more bearish, suggesting the dollar could be 20% overvalued and faces serious long-term adjustment risk.

The narrative shift is real. Hedge funds went from panic-buying dollars in March to systematically exiting positions by mid-April. What started as war-driven safe-haven demand turned into a structural dollar weakness story pretty much overnight. If the ceasefire actually holds, the medium-term pressure on the dollar could be substantial - and that's exactly what these fund managers are positioning for right now.
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