Global currency markets have reached a new high, with average daily turnover hitting about $9.6 trillion in April 2025, up roughly 28 percent from the previous survey period. Data show the U.S. dollar was on one side of around 89 percent of all foreign-exchange trades, underscoring its enduring role in global markets.
The spike in trading volume reflects increased volatility triggered by global trade tensions, shifts in monetary policy and the ripple effects of geopolitical events. Even though the dollar has faced headwinds such as a weaker start to the year and mounting fiscal pressures domestically, its position in the FX market remains unchallenged for now.
Other major currencies fared differently. The euro’s share slipped slightly, while the Chinese yuan nudged higher to around 8.5 percent of volume. The British pound’s share declined steadily, raising renewed questions about its resilience as a global currency. The full survey reveals that the U.S. and U.K., along with Singapore and Hong Kong, together capture roughly three-quarters of global FX trading activity.
What’s notable is the dual nature of the dollar’s current status. On one hand, it remains the cornerstone of FX markets and global reserves because of depth, liquidity and the size of U.S. capital markets. On the other hand, the economic environment suggests potential vulnerabilities: elevated deficits, slower growth, trade and tariff policy uncertainty, and the possibility of interest-rate cuts. These combine to create risk that the dollar’s dominance could gradually erode.
As such, investors and institutions are increasingly hedging exposure to the dollar even while they continue to rely on it for liquidity and settlement. The sheer scale of dollar-involved trades means that any meaningful shift away from the greenback would likely be gradual and complex. In the meantime, the dollar remains the world’s reference currency — even as challenges mount.
For global finance watchers this means staying alert: the current surge in FX volume underscores heightened uncertainty and opportunity, but also reinforces that despite its flaws the U.S. dollar continues to underpin global trade, finance and monetary systems.




