Q: What recent tariff did President Trump announce, and why?A: President Donald Trump announced a 35% tariff on Canadian imports, effective from August 1, 2025, citing concerns about fentanyl trafficking and trade disagreements with Canada.Q: How did currency markets immediately react to Trump's tariff announcement?A: Initially, there was a moderate strengthening of the U.S. dollar due to safe-haven demand, while the Canadian dollar weakened notably. Traders also shifted funds into other traditional safe-haven currencies like the Swiss franc and Japanese yen.Q: Is the tariff announcement already priced into the currency markets?A: Yes, to a significant extent. Markets anticipated Trump's aggressive trade stance, leading to more muted recent reactions compared to earlier in the year. However, heightened volatility remains around key tariff-related news.Q: What are the short-term implications for USD/CAD?A: Short-term, USD/CAD spiked higher immediately following the announcement but stabilized quickly around the 1.37 level. Traders should expect continued volatility around key negotiation deadlines or policy statements but within established trading ranges.Q: How do tariffs affect inflation, and what does this mean for the Fed and USD?A: Tariffs raise import costs, increasing inflation by approximately 1.8 percentage points short-term. Higher inflation pressures the Fed to maintain or raise rates temporarily, providing short-term dollar support. However, markets anticipate Fed rate cuts later in 2025 to counteract growth slowdowns, potentially weakening the dollar by year-end.Q: Are traders expecting further rate cuts from the Fed in 2025?A: Yes. Futures markets have priced in around 50 basis points of rate cuts by the end of 2025, likely starting around September. This anticipated shift toward easier monetary policy is contributing to a broader weakening of the dollar.Q: Could President Trump's policies threaten Fed independence, and how might this impact USD?A: Trump has publicly pressured the Fed for aggressive rate cuts and suggested replacing Fed Chair Powell, which raises concerns of fiscal dominance—where debt management overrides inflation control. If markets see significant interference, trust in the dollar could weaken further, triggering depreciation.Q: What is the impact of U.S. fiscal policies and rising deficits on the dollar?A: Large deficits from Trump's spending programs have boosted U.S. debt significantly, leading to a Moody’s credit rating downgrade from Aaa to Aa1. This fiscal deterioration has increased bond market volatility, causing some foreign investors to diversify away from U.S. Treasuries, adding downward pressure on the dollar.Q: How is the dollar expected to perform for the rest of 2025?A: Analysts broadly expect the dollar to face downward pressure heading toward year-end, as anticipated Fed rate cuts and fiscal uncertainties outweigh short-term safe-haven inflows. The dollar could gradually weaken, particularly against currencies such as the euro and Swiss franc.Q: What should investors and traders do to manage USD risk in this environment?A: Investors and traders should:Be prepared for volatility spikes around tariff deadlines and political headlines.Diversify safe-haven exposure beyond the dollar into assets like gold, yen, or francs.Closely monitor Fed communications for signals of policy shifts.Consider hedging USD exposure with forward contracts or by gradually reallocating into non-U.S. assets.Q: What's the bottom line for traders and investors exposed to USD?A: Markets have largely priced in Trump's tariff-driven policy approach, with elevated volatility expected but limited upside for the dollar. Investors should stay agile, hedge proactively, and remain attentive to U.S. political and economic developments throughout the remainder of 2025.Visit investingLive.com (formerly ForexLive) for additional views. This article was written by Itai Levitan at investinglive.com.