Dollar index drops below 90 for the first time since 2021 as dedollarization accelerates
The U.S. Dollar Index fell below 90 for the first time since early 2021, extending a decline that has erased nearly 15% of the dollar’s value against a basket of major currencies since the Hormuz crisis began. The drop followed Saudi Aramco’s confirmed Bitcoin-settled cargo and the dissolution of OPEC. Central banks in Brazil, South Africa, and Turkey disclosed BTC holdings for the first time this week. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent called the dollar’s decline “a temporary reaction to supply disruption” and pledged to “defend the reserve currency status by any means necessary.” Markets did not appear reassured. The dollar’s strength was never about American economic fundamentals alone. It was about being the only way to buy oil. That exclusivity is gone.