The Reputational Bankruptcy of the American Dollar

The US dollar will likely continue to get weaker, which is inflationary for the US. Let me start with some easily identifiable reasons.

The Reputational Bankruptcy of the American Dollar

I am in an unenviable position. The policy coming out of the White House has a significant impact on economics, more than ever before in my career. If I say anything positive about that policy, I’ll be put in the MAGA camp. If I criticize it, I’ll be accused of suffering from Trump derangement syndrome.

I am hired by you to make the best investment decisions possible. Rather than see me as engaged in political commentary, I’d ask that you view my remarks as purely analytical.

Let me give you this analogy. I live in Denver. Let’s imagine I am a huge Broncos fan, and the Broncos are playing the Chicago Bears. If I am betting a significant amount of money on this game, I should put my affinity for the Broncos and hatred of the Chicago Bears aside and analyze data and facts. The Broncos are either going to win or lose; my wanting them to win has zero impact on the outcome. The same applies to my analysis here.

My motto in life is Seneca’s saying, “Time discovers truth.” I just try to discover it before time does.

When it comes to politics, I also have a significant advantage. I was not born in this country. From a young age, I was brainwashed about communism, not about team Republican versus team Democrat. The failure of the Soviet Union de-brainwashed me fast concerning the virtues of communism and converted me into a believer in free markets.

As a result, I never bought into either party’s ideology, and thus in the last four presidential elections I voted for a Republican, an independent, a Democrat, and wrote in my youngest daughter, Mia Sarah (not necessarily in that order). In my articles I have criticized the policies of both Biden (student loan forgiveness, unions) and Trump (Bitcoin reserve).

I remind myself that in times like these you have to be a nuanced thinker. Some of Trump’s policies are terrific, others… not so much (I am being diplomatic here).

Scott Fitzgerald once said “The test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in mind at the same time, and still retain the ability to function.” In 2025 we are taking this “first-rate intelligence” test daily.

What will happen to the US dollar?

The US dollar will likely continue to get weaker, which is inflationary for the US.

Let me start with some easily identifiable reasons:

We have too much debt. We ran 6-7% budget deficits while our economy was growing and unemployment was at record lows. Now we have $36 trillion in debt. Our interest expenses exceed our defense spending, and these costs will continue to climb. If/when we go into recession, we may see something we have not seen in a long time – higher interest rates. Our budget deficits will balloon to between 9–12%, and the debt market, realizing that inflation (i.e., money printing) is inevitable, will say, “Pay up!”

New competition from Bitcoin. President Trump’s approval of Bitcoin as a potential reserve currency is one of the most self-serving and anti-American things I’ve seen any president do. The US dollar is the world’s reserve currency. We still have little competition for that title. China could be a contender, but it is not a democracy and has capital controls. This policy has no upside for America, only downside.

A stronger Europe. Ironically, we may inadvertently create a stronger Europe by threatening to abandon NATO. I don’t want to insult European clients (or my European friends), but the following analogy describes the US-Europe relationship on some level: Europe gradually evolved into a trust fund kid (when it came to security) and the US turned into its sugar daddy. The trust fund kid was incredibly dependent on the sugar daddy. It criticized its parent for being a barbarian and money-driven, but it relied heavily on that parent to protect it from bullies.

President Trump cut off Europe’s allowance by threatening that the US might not protect Europe from Russia. This has forced Europe to spend more money on defense. Outside of Germany (which has little debt), few European economies can afford that. This may force Europe (or at least some European countries) to become more pragmatic – to cut social programs and bureaucracy. If this leads to a stronger Europe both economically and militarily, the euro will be competing with the US dollar. This is a big if.

Our new foreign policy. When people describe President Trump’s foreign policy as “transactional,” they’re highlighting a fundamental shift in how America engages with the world – one with profound implications for our global standing, national interests, and the US dollar. The shift affects both types of capital – financial and reputational.

Reputational capital isn’t at risk in ‘one-shot’ transactions like house selling. Imagine you’re selling your primary residence and moving elsewhere. Do you disclose every flaw, or let the buyer figure things out? Your incentive is to maximize short-term profits. You’ll likely never meet this buyer again, and therefore there are incentives not to care what they’ll think of you afterward. You’ll be transactional, seeking the highest price possible for your biggest asset. This exemplifies a ‘one-shot’ system where future interactions aren’t expected.

Contrast this with a relationship- and trust-based system. Now imagine you are a homebuilder in a small town. Your suppliers only extend credit if you have a reputation for paying on time. Your employees do quality work only if you treat them fairly. Your buyers tell friends about their experience with you. The incentives naturally create a relational approach. In this trust-based system, incentives skew toward maximizing long-term profits, where reputational capital becomes the glue creating continuity.

Reputational capital radiates predictability – you know how someone will behave based on their history – but operating with low or negative reputational capital is difficult and expensive. People won’t enter long-term contracts with you or will demand external guarantees. Many potential partners will simply refuse to deal with you.

Building reputational capital works like adding pennies to a jar – each good deed incrementally adds to your standing. Yet reputational capital can collapse instantly by removing the jar’s bottom. A single breach of trust doesn’t just remove one penny; it can wipe out your entire balance and plunge you into reputational bankruptcy. The math is brutally asymmetric: good deeds might add a point or two, while bad deeds subtract by factors of 50 or 100.

This doesn’t mean transactions shouldn’t be profitable. If you’re accumulating reputational capital while consistently losing money, you’re probably in the wrong business. Each deal should be evaluated considering both long-term financial and reputational capital.

Individual transactions can sacrifice some profit but cannot afford to lose reputational capital. A “one-shot” transactional approach used in a trust-system environment may provide greater short-term profitability, but if this success comes at the expense of reputational capital, the long-term consequences for America’s global position could be devastating.

This brings us to our current foreign policy.

Relationships between nations are a trust-based system. I’d argue it’s a super-relational system because it’s multigenerational, lasting beyond the life of any one human. Reputational capital is paramount here.

Part of the US’s strength has been the soft power – the reputational capital – it exerted. We had a lot of friends, which helped us to be more effective in dealing with our foes. We keep telling ourselves that America is an “exceptional” nation. This exceptionalism didn’t just come from our financial and military might – it accumulated based on our reputational capital.

Though we don’t always succeed, we are a people who try to do the right thing. Our exceptionalism has been earned through our actions. We are the country that helped rebuild Europe and gave it six decades to repay lend-lease. We toppled communism.

I don’t know the nuances of the Ukraine mineral deal, but initially it had the optics of extortion. Though I think the renegotiated and signed version appears to be fair to both sides, forcing repayment while Ukraine is dodging Russian missiles made the US look transactional.

Actions by President Trump over the last month have undermined our reputation. We are quickly becoming a “one-shot” transactional player in a trust-based environment. Imposing tariffs on Canada on a whim to try to get it to become the 51st state erodes American reputational capital. So does not ruling out America invading Greenland. This puts us on the same moral plane as Russia invading Ukraine.

The conversation about tariffs has many nuances. For instance, I don’t know anyone who opposes reciprocal tariffs – they seem fair and don’t consume any reputational capital. But tariffs that are used as weapons in a trade war in order to annex another country erode reputational capital. Threatening to leave NATO and not protect countries that don’t spend enough on their defense diminishes reputational capital. Maybe the only way to get European countries to spend on defense was to threaten not to defend them – you can agree or disagree with the rationale behind each of Trump’s decisions, but what can’t be argued is that they undermined our reputational capital.

As we lose soft power, our influence will diminish, and thus so will perceptions of our power. The world will start looking at us not from the perspective of the continuity of generations but of presidential cycles. The word of the American president will have an expiration date of the next presidential or mid-term election.

There are two negotiation styles – Warren Buffett’s and Donald Trump’s. Both have their advantages and disadvantages. Buffett will give you one offer and one offer only. Once the deal is agreed to, even just verbally, that is the deal. Critics would say that there is downside to that predictability, as foes know how you are going to respond. Donald Trump’s style is to be unpredictable, which has its own advantages when you deal with foes – it keeps opponents guessing. But it destroys trust with your allies.

In a world of fiat currencies, all currency is a financial and reputational promise. President Trump, with the help of DOGE (and maybe even tariffs) may increase our financial strength. I hope he does, but it will likely come at a very high cost to our reputational capital, and therefore US global influence and the US dollar will continue its decline.

How are we positioned for this?

About half of our portfolio is foreign companies whose sales are not in dollars. They will benefit from a weaker dollar. We also have exposure to oil, which is priced in the US dollar and usually appreciates when the dollar weakens.

A weaker dollar means our imports will become more expensive, which is inflationary. We own many companies with pricing power and also companies that have claims on someone else’s revenues. Take Uber for example: they get about 20% of each ride. If the cost of the ride goes up, so does their dollar take.

Why does President Trump keep pushing crypto?

In July 2019, Trump said the following: “I am not a fan of Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies, which are not money, and whose value is highly volatile and based on thin air.” Five years later he promised to establish the US Crypto Reserve, and in 2025 he did.

What changed? There is no logical reason for an American president to endorse crypto. None. Here is the honest answer: Crypto bros made mega-contributions to his campaign.

To top it off, three days before he took office he issued $TRUMP – a shitcoin. Believe it or not, “shitcoin” is a technical term in the crypto community (any coin other than Bitcoin is called a shitcoin by Bitcoin “maximalists”, folks who believe Bitcoin is the one and only digital currency). The future sitting president literally issued – I don’t want to call it a currency, so I guess shitcoin is the right name – that will at some point decline to zero in value. In other words, he’ll fleece his loyal followers who purchase $TRUMP of billions of dollars.

I previously referenced both reputational capital and soft power. These types of acts by a sitting president subtract from both.


Key takeaways

  • We’re witnessing what could be called the “Bankruptcy of the Dollar” through multiple fronts: excessive national debt ($36 trillion), interest expenses exceeding defense spending, and budget deficits that may balloon to 9-12% during recession.
  • Trump’s approval of Bitcoin as a potential reserve currency is “one of the most self-serving and anti-American things” seen from any president, directly threatening the dollar’s global reserve status and offering “no upside for America, only downside.”
  • Our new “transactional” foreign policy destroys America’s reputational capital—which accumulates penny by penny but can collapse instantly—pushing us toward what resembles reputational bankruptcy with global consequences.
  • As we sacrifice soft power for short-term gains, the world will view American commitments not through generational continuity but through presidential cycles, weakening dollar confidence and our global standing.
  • The forces driving the dollar’s decline may benefit certain investments (foreign companies, oil exposure, businesses with pricing power), but will ultimately lead to inflation and diminished American influence.

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10 thoughts on “The Reputational Bankruptcy of the American Dollar”

  1. Hi Vitaliy, I thoroughly enjoy your articles but I’d like to make three points that many people have in error.

    First, Trump is not going to invade Greenland and he never said he would. He said he won’t divulge his approach. A biased reporter wanted to catch him and his administration by claiming he won’t rule out invasion. Trump (and press secretary Leavitt) reiterated no comment. This is media trying to create fear, controversy, and hysteria.

    Trump has never said anything about leaving NATO. Again, media exaggerations. He is strengthening NATO by getting them to pay their share. This allows the US to focus on China.

    Lastly, you are logically correct that some people operating in a single transaction are not penalized by bending the truth to maximize that single transaction. For a secular person, that may be correct. For someone who believes in God and Judeo-Christian values, there is a big moral problem with cheating even if they could get away with it. As John Adams said, “our constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.”

    Reply
  2. Thanks. Sound and paranoid advice is helpful but arguably not paranoid enough. From an Australian perspective, I see most US economic commentators understate the power of the Chinese position. Imagine, China, as the second largest holder of US Government long bonds (after Japan), announces that with the Trump tariffs they consider inflation in the USA will accelerate dramatically and hence long US bonds will be a losing investment in the next year and therefore announce they will sell 20% of their holdings (around US$600 billion) per week for the next five weeks. Many bond market players would want to front-run the Chinese sales and the long interest rate in the USA will skyrocket, as China ignites the bond vigilantes. Of course, China can also do a number of other US company-specific actions with relative impunity; now that the 104% tariffs are in place, there is very little left for Trump to do – go to 200%? A lead in a major Australian newspaper argued that President Xi is likely to only get one President Trump in his lifetime, and why would he waste the opportunity to help turn the world away from the USA and toward China.

    Reply
  3. Vitaliy…I appreciate your perspective, and I am troubled by my own observation of the administration’s lack of understanding of the situation on so many levels, beginning at the top. DJT, in my opinion, lacks an understanding of history’s realities, and invests too much in others’ loyalty to himself. Though he professes to admire intelligence, that seems to mean you are intelligent when you agree with him and ignorant when you don’t. He is clearly not a decent student of economics, and while he knows a great deal about manipulating people, his knowledge is flawed by his lack of interest in human psychology. His disrespect for the law and the Constitution is obvious and disgusting. And no matter what he says to the contrary, I feel he has no real love for this country and its human and natural resources.
    I wouldn’t pretend to have the solutions to all our nation’s problems, but I am certain that the answers don’t lie in the total disruption of our system and the alienation of our friends around the world.
    I conclude my remarks with a humbling instructional conversation that occurred long ago between my son and me. The subject of “intelligence” came up around our dinner table, and my then-six-year-old remarked that he didn’t think he was intelligent. I explained that intelligence wasn’t a matter of how much a person knows but more a measure of one’s ability to learn. My son listened respectfully and then turned to his mother and opined, “I think Daddy knows a lot, but I don’t think he has the ability to learn.” I took his profundity to heart and have sought to learn something new every day since.
    I think someone ought to have that conversation with the Donald.

    Reply
  4. Hi Vitaliy
    I receive your newsletter (two copies, actually) and think you are one of the smartest people I know.
    The only thing I will say right now, and based on my readings of the 1930s, is that I feel like I am living in the 1930s. And I have never been more frightened to live in this country than I am now.

    Reply
  5. I have a different perspective. Trump has a very small window to get everything accomplished – cutting govt expenditures by eliminating waste fraud and abuse – Federal spending in 2019 was $4.5T vs last yr $7.2T, achieving fair trade, lower taxes for all, a safe and secure border, ending lawfare in our govt agencies, only americans being able to vote and eliminating ridiculous regulations which further inhibit economic growth and prosperity. The goal is to become a much more fiscally sound, faster growing economy that works for everyone. Lets face it, our govt is a complete mess. Will there be broken glass and missteps, yes. Can they be corrected, of course. The status quo cannot continue and those that want it to will be the loudest at criticizing. Do I like Trump’s 51st state or invasion of Greenland comments – no and comments like that need to stop. That being said, our traditional allies – Europe and Canada have become so woke, so different that they are almost unrecognizable. As Vance stated in his remarks to European leaders af few mos ago, If the leaders of those countries won’t listen to their own people, how can we possibly help them? Like Druckenmiller stated yesterday, tarriffs are better than tax increases and they will get worked out soon becuase time is short.

    Reply
    • “That being said, our traditional allies – Europe and Canada have become so woke, so different that they are almost unrecognizable…” Try living in Said Countries!!! Western Canada has stated It’s concerns and has been ignored just like the Democrats ignore the Republicans. So, just because Our Leaders are led by Their Nose-rings means that the Entire Country should be beaten over the Head with Tariffs? Look in the Mirror…America has broken the Trust of Canada, Europe, Australia and other Allies. How do WE trust you Americans now?? And why should We, now that America has stabbed Us in the Back. If America had issues with Trade (and in 2016, Trump also had Beefs which He then negotiated a so-called “Free Trade Agreement”, Yes, that was HIM and THAT Agreement apparently still wasn’t good enough…), why wasn’t a continuing Free Trade Meeting not set up? Wow, must of been because America was HAPPY with It’s Trade Deal but nooooooooo! Can’t rest on what was agreed to, must upset Apple cart because TRUMP….

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  6. Hi Vitaliy: We receive your newsletter, and we always find much sound thinking and many useful insights there. Your newsletter published today is another excellent example. However, I do wonder about this comment: “President Trump, with the help of DOGE (and maybe even tariffs) may increase our financial strength.”

    Do you truly think that DOGE can – or intends to – “increase our financial strength”? As far as many of us can tell, Elon Musk and his underage hacking crew do not have that goal in mind as they slash indiscriminately at our workforce. In fact, if what some of have heard is true, the goal is to somehow wrangle enough money to continue heavy tax cuts for the 1-2 percent – so DOGE is hacking and slashing services, valuable and seasoned personnel, etc. This is the only question I have amidst your many valuable and common-sense insights. Please keep it up!
    Best,
    Maureen

    Reply
  7. Nothing wrong with spending a bit of reputational equity to restore balance in our relationships with other sovereignties. This is the same as a man cashing in his ‘points’ earned by completing his wife’s ‘honey-do’ list to to spend the afternoon golfing with his friends.

    Reply
  8. The actual difference between Buffett’s and Trump’s negotiating stance is that Buffett is a win-win guy and Trump is a win-lose guy. Buffett’s word you can trust and Trump’s you can’t. Buffett’s reputation is that of a wise old uncle and Trump’s is that of a neighborhood bully. Buffett stays within his “circle of competence” and Trump says he knows best about almost everything. The country has now shown twice that it wants a bully in charge, an egotistical self aggrandizing bully. You may agree or disagree with any or all of his policies as policies, but his reputation, and to some extent our country’s reputation, is now that of an opportunistic bully, not an ally.

    Reply

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