WASHINGTON: U.S. Treasurys are confronting fresh political risk after President Donald Trump’s administration revived pressure on Denmark over Greenland and coupled it with threats of trade retaliation, prompting parts of Europe’s investment community to reassess exposure to U.S. government debt. The reassessment has fueled market talk that Europe could use its substantial Treasury holdings as leverage, even as confirmed selling to date remains limited to individual institutions rather than any coordinated government action.

The renewed focus on Greenland has unsettled transatlantic ties in a period already marked by heightened sensitivity to Washington’s fiscal trajectory and policy volatility. In public remarks around the Davos forum, Trump said he wanted immediate negotiations to acquire Greenland from Denmark and said he would not use force. The same dispute has been linked to tariff threats against Europe, adding a geopolitical layer to what is normally treated as the world’s benchmark safe asset.
Several large Northern European asset owners have said they are reviewing U.S. exposure and, in some cases, reducing it. Sweden’s Alecta and Denmark’s AkademikerPension have disclosed sales or planned divestment of U.S. Treasury holdings, citing credit and long term fiscal concerns rather than politics. AkademikerPension has said it intends to exit its Treasury position by the end of January, after describing U.S. public finances as unsustainable over the long run.
The market impact of these moves is small in dollar terms, but their signaling effect has been amplified by the scale of European involvement in Treasury markets. U.S. data and private sector tracking show Europe as a major source of recent foreign buying of Treasurys, and global custody centers in Europe are associated with very large reported holdings because they safeguard securities for international clients. That structure has fed headlines claiming a potential $1.7 trillion European “dump,” a figure that more often reflects custody location than political control.
Greenland dispute and Treasury leverage talk
The phrase “Treasury dump” has gained traction amid heightened rhetoric from the Trump administration and concerns that policy shocks can spill into financial markets. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has publicly downplayed the significance of Denmark’s Treasury holdings, while the president has warned of “big retaliation” if Europe were to sell U.S. assets. Those statements have increased attention on how geopolitics can influence portfolio decisions, even when investors insist their actions are grounded in risk management and mandate constraints.
At the same time, official data show continued foreign demand for U.S. securities overall, with net purchases across 2025 and foreign Treasury holdings reaching record highs in late 2025. Investors and policy makers in Europe have also urged caution about acting on uncertainties before they materialize, reflecting a broader effort to avoid abrupt, market moving decisions. In practice, large institutional holders typically rebalance gradually, and Treasury market depth can absorb sizable flows, though abrupt shifts can still affect yields and funding conditions.
Bitcoin narrative grows, but reserve shift remains unproven
The Greenland dispute has also been folded into a separate narrative promoted in parts of the cryptocurrency market: that any erosion of the dollar’s safe haven status would force a rotation into Bitcoin. Verified evidence for an official reserve shift into Bitcoin remains absent. No major European government or central bank has announced plans to replace Treasury reserves with Bitcoin, and the institutions that have disclosed Treasury sales have not described crypto as a substitute for sovereign liquidity and collateral needs.
What is clear is that the Trump administration’s approach has placed the U.S. safe asset premium under sharper scrutiny at a moment when debt, deficits, and policy unpredictability are already central market themes. For investors, the core question is not whether Treasurys will lose their role overnight, but whether the risk pricing attached to U.S. assets should change when trade policy and geopolitical disputes increasingly intersect with financial messaging from Washington.
For now, the most concrete developments are selective institutional divestments and broader client discussions about trimming U.S. exposure, not a unified European liquidation. Still, the episode underscores how the Greenland standoff and tariff threats have turned a political dispute into a market story, with U.S. borrowing costs, global portfolio flows, and the dollar’s reputation all receiving closer attention as the Trump administration escalates pressure on European allies. – By Content Syndication Services.
