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Goldman Sachs says investors trim dollar holdings, return to neutral position on US

By Saeed Azhar and Megan Davies

NEW YORK (Reuters) -Goldman Sachs President John Waldron said a recent lightening up of U.S. dollar assets by investors had shown them returning to more neutral positions on the currency, rather than a wholesale "run for the gates."

Financial markets have witnessed a roller-coaster ride in the initial few months of the Trump administration as its April 2 move to increase tariffs on trading partners prompted some investors to move away from American assets. The White House has since made progress on tariff deals.

Waldron said that some investors "that were owning 10%, 20%, 30% more U.S. dollars in U.S. assets than they would otherwise be holding" had gone back to a more neutral position.

Waldron said investors had been optimistic about the U.S. outperforming the rest of the world. "Everybody, for the most part, had some expression of overweight U.S.," he said.

But after the tariff announcement, clients had been active repositioning portfolios in currencies, Waldron said.

"The lightening up (of dollar holdings) we've seen (since April 2) is more the excess coming out, not a wholesale run for the gates," Waldron told Reuters in an interview.

"Is there a sense that the volatility of U.S. policymaking is higher, and therefore we should be reducing our holdings? We haven't seen that yet."

Waldron, 55, was added to Goldman's board of directors earlier this year, a few weeks after he was given a retention bonus, cementing his position as a potential successor to CEO David Solomon.

TRUCE

The recent truce in the U.S.-China trade war has since set off a relief rally in stocks and propelled the dollar higher with the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq recovering losses since April 2 - or "Liberation Day" - when President Donald Trump announced sweeping reciprocal tariffs.

"The market is -- I'd call it relatively benign in the context of what was going on," Waldron said.

Waldron said that there was demand from investors for access to Chinese equities and fixed income products, and said that American firms were able to operate in China despite challenges.

"I wouldn't overstate the challenges between the two governments in terms of our ability to operate," said Waldron. "We can operate. The American firms are operating."

Waldron said most companies are trying to figure out how to navigate the impact of relatively higher tariffs from a cost standpoint.

"How much of this are we going to ... pass through on price? How much of this are we going to push back on our suppliers? Who's going to bear the brunt of these tariffs? And the answer is it will be shared," he said.