This is not just another bond transaction â itâs a clear signal that global trust is being tested.
European institutions have quietly sold nearly $9 billion worth of U.S. Treasury bonds, despite political pressure from Washington to avoid such moves. What makes this different is the motive: this was not a profit-driven decision.
đš A Danish pension fund exited around $100 million
đš Swedenâs state-backed pension fund AP7 unloaded a massive $8.8 billion
đ Total offload: ~$9 billion
According to the funds involved, the decision was driven by political and institutional concerns, including:
Rule-of-law risks
Rising U.S. political instability
Discomfort with recent foreign policy behavior
For decades, European pension funds treated U.S. Treasuries as the ultimate risk-free asset. That assumption is now being questioned.
â ď¸ The broader backdrop matters:
Tensions over Greenland
NATO-related disputes
Growing European frustration with what is perceived as U.S. financial pressure and coercive diplomacy
Until recently, de-dollarization was largely a BRICS narrative â China, Russia, India, and others slowly reducing reliance on the U.S. dollar. Europe entering this space changes the conversation entirely.
Europe still holds roughly $1.6 trillion in U.S. debt â more than Japan â which makes this move symbolically powerful, even if the number looks small.
đĽ This isnât about bond yields.
Itâs about confidence erosion.
Markets are starting to realize that politics can now move capital faster than economics â and that shift has long-term implications for the U.S. dollarâs global dominance.





