The global markets at the start of 2026 have been tumultuous. The power struggle between Trump and Federal Reserve Chair Powell goes far beyond a mere budget dispute; it is a deep-seated contest over monetary policy.



On the surface, it appears to be a disagreement over the renovation funds for the Federal Reserve building. In reality, Trump has been directly eroding the central bank's independence through judicial pressure, bypassing the Fed to implement "Mortgage QE," setting credit card rate caps, and a series of other actions. The division within the Fed has reached its highest point in three years, and policy-making has fallen into deadlock.

Market reactions are the most telling. The US dollar index plummeted sharply to 98.82, marking the worst annual decline since 2017. Nasdaq futures and US stock index futures both mourned, with declines exceeding 0.9%. Over a single week, Japan sold over $20 billion in US Treasuries, and overseas capital is fleeing at an accelerated pace. In contrast, Asian stock markets are rising against the trend, as global risk aversion spreads.

$DUSK $DOLO $ZEC and other cryptocurrencies, due to their independence from traditional financial systems, have become a focus for many investors. Meanwhile, gold prices have broken through the $4,600 mark, reaching new all-time highs, and London gold continues to soar—this is capital voting with its feet for traditional safe-haven assets.

Alarm bells are ringing at the institutional level. BlackRock has urgently reduced its holdings of US Treasuries, and Lagarde has openly stated that the era of "American exceptionalism" is over. JPMorgan warns that the dollar and US debt will remain under pressure. History is repeating itself: when Nixon intervened in the Fed, it triggered a decade-long stagflation crisis. Today, with sluggish US economic growth and rising unemployment, blind rate cuts may only lead to another tragic repeat.

The European Central Bank issued a stern warning: White House actions are eroding the dollar’s dominance. Global capital is rapidly shifting toward gold, diversified safe-haven assets, and even independent cryptocurrencies. How long can dollar hegemony last? This question is now in front of everyone.

What do you think? Can Trump truly take control of the Federal Reserve? Will dollar dominance fall into a long-term decline? How high can gold and safe-haven assets go? Share your views in the comments.
DUSK2,59%
DOLO1,1%
ZEC-4,26%
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OldLeekNewSicklevip
· 01-15 22:58
Nixon's playbook is being replayed now, indicating that history really does repeat itself... It's just that this time the Federal Reserve isn't as tough. The dollar is plunging, capital is fleeing, and those safe-haven assets in the crypto world are indeed attracting funds, but honestly, the ones who truly benefit are always those institutions that got in early. We latecomer retail investors are just here to take the leftovers. BlackRock is already reducing its holdings of US Treasuries, and gold has broken through 4600, which is a very clear signal. The question is—are we now jumping in at the high or at the real bottom? That's the dilemma of a gambler. The erosion of the central bank's independence is indeed serious, but ultimately, the market will vote with its feet. However, every time the order is reconstructed, someone has to pay the price. By the way, those few cryptocurrencies have surged so wildly; could it be another new capital pump scheme behind the scenes? Just for your reference.
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ZKProofEnthusiastvip
· 01-15 15:25
Is the US dollar really doomed? It feels like watching history repeat itself. I've seen Nixon's move before, but the current situation seems even crazier... Gold breaking 4600 is a very strong signal. I need to take some profits and reduce my positions. The Federal Reserve's independence has been completely undermined. Who can hold up against this? This wave in crypto assets might really be the turning point. It's finally not just pure gambling. Trump's combination of tactics directly undermined the US dollar's credibility. It's quite ruthless. I think multi-asset allocation is the only way out this year. Going all-in on anything could easily backfire.
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GasGuruvip
· 01-14 13:43
Here we go again, is history really repeating itself... Is the US dollar going to crash?
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BridgeNomadvip
· 01-13 00:49
nah, fed independence getting nuked is basically the ultimate counterparty risk nobody's pricing in. seen this movie before tho—when trust assumptions break, liquidity fragments hard and fast. dollar collapse incoming feels inevitable at this point tbh
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CounterIndicatorvip
· 01-13 00:48
This time, you're really playing with fire. The dollar hegemony is being dismantled by its own hand. But to be honest, the cyclical theory of history has long been overused, and the Nixon approach... The real variable now is that no one can backstop it anymore. Gold breaking 4600 is just the appetizer. I actually have more confidence in those things that no one trusts to begin with. It's contradictory, but that's just the way it is.
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0xTherapistvip
· 01-13 00:43
The dollar is plunging, and gold has hit a new high—this pace is a bit frightening... It really feels like a change is coming.
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DaoDevelopervip
· 01-13 00:39
honestly the governance failure here is what gets me... it's like watching a smart contract with no checks and balances execute unfettered. when you break the separation of powers primitives, the whole system degrades, no way around it.
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