Currencies June 10, 2026 02:29 PM

Fed rate-hike bets weaken post-election 'debasement' trade, ING strategist says

Expectations of a Fed response to inflation and firmer US data have eroded a dollar-weakness wager that gained traction after President Trump's inauguration

By Maya Rios
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Rising expectations that the Federal Reserve will lift interest rates to counter inflation have undercut the 'debasement trade' that pressured the U.S. dollar after President Donald Trump took office, according to Chris Turner, head of foreign-exchange strategy at ING Bank NV. Strong U.S. economic data and elevated consumer prices have led markets to price in a quarter-point rate hike by year-end, reversing earlier expectations for easing amid geopolitical-driven energy price shocks.

Fed rate-hike bets weaken post-election 'debasement' trade, ING strategist says
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Key Points

  • ING strategist Chris Turner says Fed rate-hike bets have eroded the post-election 'debasement trade'.
  • Stronger U.S. economic data and elevated consumer prices have led traders to price in a quarter-point Fed rate increase by year-end, reversing earlier expectations for cuts.
  • Shifts in energy prices tied to the conflict in the Middle East helped change market views on Fed policy, affecting FX, bond and commodities markets.

Summary

Growing market bets that the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates to rein in inflation have diminished a trade that hoped the dollar would be weakened by policy and political pressures. That assessment comes from Chris Turner, head of foreign-exchange strategy at ING Bank NV.


Turner points to a shift in market sentiment following a period in which the dollar suffered under policy moves and rhetoric earlier in the presidential term. "Trump’s trade policies and criticism of the Federal Reserve’s independence hurt the US currency last year, pushing the dollar index to its worst performance in eight years," he said in his note. Those conditions had supported a so-called debasement trade.

The debasement trade is a bet that rising consumer prices will erode the dollar’s purchasing power and that investors will move into assets and currencies perceived as better stores of value. That theme gained traction after President Donald Trump took office and was driven by market concerns that the Fed might be less independent.

More recently, Turner wrote, stronger U.S. economic data and persistent inflation have changed market expectations. Traders are now pricing in a quarter-point Federal Reserve rate increase by the end of this year. "The rise in real rates has pressured last year’s dollar debasement trade, which had assumed that a captured Fed would do the bidding of the White House," Turner wrote in a note today. "The view that the Fed will react to this inflation shock has been central to the dollar’s recovery over the last month."

The article notes that earlier expectations for rate cuts were altered by developments in the Middle East and the resulting rise in energy prices, which contributed to the shift toward pricing in tighter policy rather than easing.

Markets impacted by this adjustment include foreign exchange markets directly, while higher energy prices and inflation dynamics have influenced rate expectations that connect to bond and commodities sectors.


What remains uncertain

While markets are repositioning around the possibility of a Fed tightening, uncertainties remain around the persistence of inflation and the trajectory of energy prices tied to geopolitical developments. These factors will continue to shape policy expectations and currency moves.

Risks

  • Persistence of higher consumer prices could sustain upward pressure on interest-rate expectations, impacting bond and FX markets.
  • Further increases in energy prices stemming from the war in the Middle East could continue to alter inflation trajectories and policy bets, affecting energy and commodities sectors.
  • Market assumptions about the Federal Reserve’s independence and policy response remain uncertain and could prompt renewed volatility in currency and fixed-income markets.

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