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This overlooked risk to financial markets usually lurks quietly under the surface. But now it’s ‘shouting, not whispering’

Jason Ma
By
Jason Ma
Jason Ma
Weekend Editor
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Jason Ma
By
Jason Ma
Jason Ma
Weekend Editor
Down Arrow Button Icon
June 28, 2025, 12:53 PM ET
On the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, June 25, 2025.
On the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, June 25, 2025.Michael Nagle—Bloomberg/Getty Images
  • Much attention has been focused on the U.S.’s current account deficit, or the imbalance between imports and exports, but there’s another metric that’s poised to amplify market shocks. That’s the net international investment position, according to Kevin Ford, FX and macro strategist at Convera, who likens it to America’s financial scorecard with the rest of the world.

President Donald Trump’s trade war has focused much of Wall Street’s attention on the U.S.’s current account deficit, or the imbalance between imports and exports. But there’s another metric worth following that could worsen financial risks.

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According to Kevin Ford, FX and macro strategist at Convera, the country’s net international investment position (NIIP) often gets overlooked.

It measures how much the U.S. owns abroad versus how much the world owns in the U.S., he said in a note last week, describing it as America’s financial scorecard with the rest of the world. And by that score, the U.S. is in the red by about $26 trillion, or nearly 80% of GDP.

“That means foreign investors hold way more American assets than Americans hold abroad,” Ford added. “It’s a setup that works fine when confidence is high, but in shaky times like 2025, it can become a pressure cooker.”

Indeed, times have been shaky. The U.S. Dollar Index is down 10% so far this year as the shock of Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs continues to reverberate, creating doubts about U.S. assets once deemed reliable safe havens.

In fact, the dollar’s year-to-date plunge is the worst since the U.S. transitioned to a free-floating exchange rate in 1973, effectively ending the post–World War II system of fixed rates under the Bretton Woods agreement.

Meanwhile, legislation that would add trillions of dollars to fiscal deficits is advancing in Congress, stirring more anxiety among foreign investors, especially those who hold U.S. debt.

Put it all together, and this year has been a textbook example of how a negative NIIP profile can magnify currency turmoil, Ford warned.

“And because so much of the capital propping up the U.S. financial system comes from abroad, even small shifts in sentiment can lead to big outflows,” he added. “That’s a lot of dollars being sold, and fewer being bought, and voilà, the greenback stumbles.”

Circling back to the financial scorecard analogy, Ford explained that the problem with focusing on the current account deficit is that it only shows the flow of transactions, i.e., imports versus exports.

By contrast, the NIIP shows the overall pile of debt—and ignoring that would be like judging a person’s spending habits without checking their credit card balance, he said, making trust “your most important asset.”

“Yes, trade deficits, interest rates, and Fed signals all play a role, but the NIIP tells you just how exposed the U.S. is when things go sideways,” Ford concluded. “It’s the quiet structural risk lurking under the surface, ready to amplify shocks. And in a year like this, it’s been shouting, not whispering.”

Waning confidence in the dollar has spurred investors and central banks around the world to load up on gold, which has soared in price in recent years and particularly this year, surging 21% in 2025.

Trump’s unrelenting pressure on Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell to cut interest rates has also weakened the dollar lately.

While many on Wall Street see even more downside potential ahead for the dollar, the AI boom that’s still drawing billions in global investment flows to the U.S. offers some hope for relief.

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About the Author
Jason Ma
By Jason MaWeekend Editor

Jason Ma is the weekend editor at Fortune, where he covers markets, the economy, finance, and housing.

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