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Trump 2.0: a blip in history or a structural geopolitical shift?

Trump 2.0: a blip in history or a structural geopolitical shift?

By Victor Golovtchenko

March 11, 2026 at 7:25 AM

Trump 2.0: a blip in history or a structural geopolitical shift?

Every decade or two, global financial markets undergo a structural paradigm shift that renders established correlation models obsolete. The escalating geopolitical shockwaves of 2026 are rupturing the models which traders are used to, and the feeling of a profound historical transition is looming over financial markets across the world. If anything, the ongoing war in Iran and the explosive, parabolic rally of the US dollar since the conflict’s inception have left traditional macroeconomic analysts scrambling.

Desperate to map these events onto conventional frameworks, they attribute the greenback's rise purely to standard safe haven capital flows and localized energy shocks. However, they might be missing the broader picture. To accurately forecast where indices, commodities, and currencies are heading over the next three years, we must recognize that the underlying geopolitical architecture has fundamentally changed.

A compelling framework for this shift is articulated in a recent Cambridge University Press paper by scholars Stacie E. Goddard and Abraham Newman, titled Further Back to the Future: Neoroyalism, the Trump Administration, and the Emerging International System. The authors posit that the world is decisively moving away from the Liberal International Order and the Westphalian system of legally equal sovereign states.

Instead, the global architecture is descending into a "neo-royalist" order. In this system, global affairs are structured by a small group of hyper-elites, or ruling cliques. These cliques utilize modern economic and military interdependencies to aggressively extract material and status tributes. They reject sovereign equality, viewing even long-standing allies as subordinate entities ripe for extraction. While the theory is far fetched, and may well be thrown out even before the end of 2026 by the looming midterm elections in the US, we can extrapolate three bold hypotheses that may dictate market trends through the rest of Donald Trump’s term.

Currencies: The tributary US dollar and the loyalty premium

The forex market playbook is taking shape as Trump 2.0 attempts to assert dominance

The forex market playbook is taking shape as Trump 2.0 attempts to assert dominance

Since the first shots were fired in Iran, the US dollar has experienced a relentless, structural rally against virtually every major fiat currency. In a conventional world, this strength would eventually mean revert as central banks adjust interest rate differentials. In a neo-royalist world, however, the dollar’s supremacy is structural. It has been transformed from a mere medium of exchange into the ultimate mechanism for exercising control.

Our first hypothesis is that the US dollar may no longer trade on traditional economic parity models. Instead it may function as the mandatory tribute currency of the neo-royalist hierarchy, as outlined by Goddard and Newman. The current administration commands unparalleled power resources, primarily the dollar-based global financial clearing system.

To remain within the protective umbrella of the US government and avoid the financial banishment of secondary sanctions or punitive tariffs, subordinate nations must pay a premium by continuing to purchase US assets.

For currency traders, this means discarding the notion of a cyclical dollar peak, which was getting shaped towards the end of 2025. If the thesis is accurate, over the next three years, the Euro, the British Pound, and the Canadian Dollar may face persistent, structural downward pressure, especially amid a continuous and escalating conflict in the Middle East.

European nations, heavily exposed to the geopolitical blowback from the region, will constantly pay this geopolitical toll. FX markets will no longer trade on baseline economics, but on a nation's proximity to the sovereign's favor. The market may relentlessly price in geopolitical loyalty over monetary policy.

Commodities: Sovereign collusion and the anti-tribute movement

The war in Iran has predictably thrown global energy markets into chaos, injecting a massive risk premium into crude oil and natural gas. The emergence of a bifurcated, two-tier commodity market driven by sovereign collusion may stem from that. Over the remaining three years of Trump’s term, the dominant US government may leverage its massive domestic energy production to secure favorable, below market pricing for its loyalist network of states.

In contrast, nations excluded from this inner circle will be forced into a hyper-inflated shadow market, bartering for Brent crude and industrial metals at exorbitant premiums. Oil price action will be characterized by violent volatility sparked by closed door deal-making among global power structures.

And while historically, a surging US dollar acts as a wrecking ball for precious metals, in an era where the primary reserve currency is actively weaponized to enforce hierarchy, the precious metals complex may transition from an inflation hedge into the ultimate non-sovereign shield.

Indices: The US premium and clique capitalism

The most profound impact of the neo-royalist shift described in the paper from Cambridge University, may undoubtedly be felt across global equity indices. The core objective of a neo-royalist system is to concentrate material wealth and status within exclusive elite networks. This reality fundamentally alters the calculus of stock market valuation.

Broad-based indices like the S&P 500 may cease to be barometers of the broader macroeconomic environment. Instead, they will reflect the consolidated wealth of the asset owners globally who possess direct proximity to political power. Corporations aligning intimately with the administration’s strategic goals, particularly defense contractors reaping the windfalls from the Iran conflict, domestic energy titans, and monopolistic technology giants, may receive impenetrable regulatory moats and lucrative state contracts.

As a result, US benchmark indices may continue to aggressively siphon in global capital. International wealth has been flooding into Wall Street for the past decades, viewing the US mega-cap tech stocks as the safest repository of value. Only energy self-sufficiency may grant other indices like the DAX 40 and the FTSE 100 an escape from structural stagnation relative to their American peers.

Conclusion: Trading the geopolitical landscape from a new perspective

The days of relying on the predictable rhythms of the so-called rules-based order may well be over. The escalating war in Iran and the ensuing dominance of the US dollar are not temporary market anomalies in the current context. Instead they are mechanisms which the global financial system hegemon, may vigorously use to re-establish its power.

Granted, this will most likely depend on the ability of the US to dominate the battlefield in and around the Middle East. But by acknowledging this new status quo, traders can position themselves on the right side of financial history. The new global order may be unforgiving, but for those who understand that capital now flows toward power and protection, the trends may be more clear compared to established and deconstructed paradigms.

This material is a marketing communication provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice, recommendation, or an offer or solicitation to trade. Any market analysis, opinions, or forecasts are based on publicly available information and do not constitute independent investment research. Past performance and forecasts are not reliable indicators of future results. Scope Markets accepts no liability for any loss arising from reliance on this information.

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