Financial Markets Shaking Off Political Chaos


(Bloomberg Opinion) — The first half of the year has been a geopolitical hot mess. President Donald Trump’s chaotic approach to tariffs, escalating military conflict in the Middle East, the continuing war in Ukraine and the existential threat posed to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization have left financial markets…largely unscathed? Global equities are in good health, government bond yields are becalmed and oil is trading in line with its five-year average. The dollar is the only casualty, losing ground against all of its peers in the past six months. 

So the remainder of 2025 will follow the same pattern, right? Well. The TACO trade in equities — “Trump Always Chickens Out” — will be reexamined early this month when the tariff pauses end. The independence of the Federal Reserve looks set to be sorely tested. The fiscal implications of NATO’s 32 members belatedly agreeing to increase defense spending to 5% of gross domestic product will reverberate around bond markets, particularly in Europe. 

“The interplay of politics, economics and markets will make assaying the paths of stocks, bonds, commodities and currencies this year even harder than usual,” we wrote at the start of the year. The capriciousness of the world’s most important person means staying nimble and being willing to scuttle to the sidelines will remain the safest strategy. In short: Be careful out there. 

Related:This Isn’t the First Time Markets Have Been Rattled by Tariffs. It Won’t Be the Last

It’s Your Currency — And It’s Becoming Your Problem 

The greenback has lost more than 10% against its major peers this year, sending the dollar index to a three-year low. While that’s broadly good news for a world that’s suffered in recent years from the home of the world’s reserve currency sucking in much of the available investment flows, it should start to worry US officials if it illustrates mounting concern about a burgeoning budget deficit. There’s a reason gold is near a record high.

In the same way as average government bond yields have returned to levels seen between 2005 and 2014 (more on that later), the greenback may weaken to historical norms; its average for the past 20 years against the euro, for example, is around $1.22 compared with about $1.17 currently, while versus the pound the levels are $1.50 versus $1.37.  Though talk in Frankfurt of the euro playing a more global role sounds like wishful thinking, the dollar’s crown as king of the currency world is definitely slipping.

Higher for Longer Is the New Mantra for US Rates

At the end of 2023, the futures market was anticipating a Fed funds rate of around 3.5% by December 2024; instead, it got 4.5%. At the end of last year, the rate was expected to have declined to 4% by now, but it’s still stuck at 4.5%. With the US economy — and the consumer — confounding the gloomy prognosis of economists, the US central bank has resisted increasingly strident calls from the White House (Fed Chair Jerome Powell is a “very stupid person,” according to Trump’s latest broadside) to cut borrowing costs.  

Related:Nine Investment Must Reads for This Week (May 13, 2025)

Powell’s tenure ends in May 2026. With his replacement likely to be more craven/flexible (select according to taste) in acceding to Trump’s demands — and potential successors lining up in recent weeks to affirm their dovish credentials — the Fed’s independence in setting monetary policy looks worryingly compromised even before Powell’s exit.

For Bonds, 3% Remains the New 1.5%

The average 10-year government yield for the members of the Group of Seven has been basically treading water all year — but that means the 1.5% borrowing cost that prevailed for the past decade is a distant memory, with the 3% level of the decade before becoming the new normal. Treasury yields are down a bit this year, while bund yields are up a touch — the latter a surprisingly modest gain given the enormous surge in borrowing planned by the German government to fund increased defense spending. Switzerland remains an outlier with sub-zero rates at short maturities (more on that later). 

Related:Schwab Trading Tops Estimates as Volatility Hits Customers

The subtext for bonds is a little more complicated than usual. Rather than central bank action steering the market — the European Central Bank has been twice as aggressive as the Fed in easing policy — rising deficits and stubborn inflation are now the main bugbears for the bond vigilantes. So expect the focus to remain on what happens with the longer end of the yield curve; if investors fall further out of love with 30-year debt, fiscal alarm bells should start to ring. 

Negativity Is Back, Baby

Negative yields were supposed to have been banished, never to be seen again. At least that was the fervent hope of those who rightly fear deflation. However, 2025 has served up another unwanted surprise, with the Swiss National Bank cutting its policy rate to zero this month. In anticipation that the strength of the franc and the inflation rate slowing to minus 0.1% may prompt a further cut to below zero in September, Swiss government bonds out to three years now have negative yields. 

The universe of negative-yielding bonds peaked at an astonishing $18.4 trillion at the end of 2020. While we’re unlikely to revisit that scenario, what’s happening in Switzerland is a reminder that sub-zero interest rates will forever be part of the central bank toolkit.

Stock Market’s Animal Spirits Prove Impossible to Extinguish 

Resistance is futile: The 20%-plus recovery staged by the S&P 500 index in the aftermath of Trump’s initial introduction of tariffs in April tells all. Too many investors went underweight and are being dragged back in. And, this year, stock indexes in Europe and Asia are outpacing their US peers, broadening the gains and driving the world’s stock market value to a record $133 trillion.

What happens next with tariffs is anyone’s guess, so the outlook for corporate earnings remains shrouded in doubt. But betting against investor appetite for stocks no matter how overvalued they might seem to be hasn’t been a winning strategy. 

“The World Is Swimming in Oil”

Global oil demand is rising gradually, but ever more of the black stuff is being pumped. Saudi Arabian supply is set to reach a two-year high of 10 million barrels a day as it chafes at its OPEC+ partners exceeding their mandated quotas. “The world is swimming in oil,” as our colleague Javier Blas wrote last week. 

Even the conflict between Israel and Iran produced just a short-lived spike in Brent crude that quickly faded, leaving it trading below $70 a barrel. With the OPEC+ cartel agreeing to increase production quotas and prices high enough for US shale producers to have locked in their output, oil prices are only headed one way — down.

More from Bloomberg Opinion:

  • The Market Is Getting Back to

  • Negative Swiss Rates Send a

  • Ceasefire or Not, the World Is

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(Corrects pound/dollar level in fifth paragraph.)

To contact the authors of this story:
Mark Gilbert at [email protected]
Marcus Ashworth at [email protected]




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