Stock Markets April 10, 2026 12:29 PM

BofA Survey: Investors Close Dollar Shorts but Stay Reluctant to Go Long

Respondents see Iran conflict as a temporary shock; growth concerns and a dovish Fed narrative keep dollar sentiment muted

By Maya Rios
BofA Survey: Investors Close Dollar Shorts but Stay Reluctant to Go Long

Bank of America’s most recent investor survey indicates a material reduction in short positions on the U.S. dollar after the outbreak of war in Iran, yet respondents are not moving to long dollar exposures. Survey participants characterize the conflict’s effect on the dollar as a one-time level shift rather than a persistent trend for 2026. Dominant themes driving the outlook include growth concerns that outweigh inflation fears and expectations that the Federal Reserve will maintain a dovish stance.

Key Points

  • Investors significantly reduced dollar short positions after the Iran conflict but have not built long dollar positions.
  • Growth concerns outweigh inflation fears, and respondents expect a dovish Federal Reserve, supporting continued bearish sentiment on the dollar.
  • Conviction to go long on rates rose after a sell-off, yet investors are not taking long-duration positions versus benchmarks and see value in front-end global rate curves; emerging market positioning is described as clean.

Bank of America’s latest investor poll shows a clear adjustment in foreign-exchange positioning since the outbreak of war in Iran: respondents substantially pared short positions on the U.S. dollar, but have not transitioned into long dollar bets.

The survey indicates that the bulk of shorts were closed aggressively as the conflict began. Since then, positions and sentiment have been largely stable compared with the prior survey, suggesting that participants view the episode as producing a temporary level shift in the dollar rather than a change in the directional outlook for 2026.

Drivers of continued dollar weakness

Investors cited concerns about growth that outweigh worries about inflation, a combination that underpins the persistent bearish tilt toward the dollar. The survey respondents expressed confidence that the Federal Reserve will adopt a dovish approach to monetary policy, reinforcing the subdued appetite for long dollar exposures.

Interest-rate positioning

Following a recent sell-off, conviction to take long positions on rates increased materially among respondents. However, that increased conviction has not translated into long-duration positions versus benchmarks. Instead, survey participants appear to be favoring exposure to the front end of global rate curves, signalling that they see relative value in shorter-term yields. The majority of those surveyed believe front ends are already sufficiently priced.

Emerging markets

The survey also found that emerging market positioning now appears clean, a condition that could allow EM assets to benefit if geopolitical sentiment continues to improve. That assessment reflects investor positioning rather than a directional forecast.


This snapshot from the Bank of America survey highlights a market that has adjusted risk positions in response to geopolitical shock but remains cautious about establishing fresh bullish dollar exposure. Views on growth, inflation, and Fed policy are central to that cautious stance, while fixed-income front-end valuations and emerging-market positioning are specific areas where participants see current dynamics as relevant.

Risks

  • Geopolitical developments - The survey treats the Iran conflict as a temporary level shift; any escalation or persistence could overturn that assessment and change risk positioning.
  • Monetary policy expectations - If Federal Reserve policy deviates from the dovish outlook expressed by respondents, dollar and rate positioning could be challenged.
  • Market repricing - Participants view front ends of rate curves as sufficiently priced; unexpected moves in short-term yields could affect fixed-income positions.

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