For the seventh straight day the U.S. dollar has been weak. This streak hasn't been matched since April 2011, after the Federal Reserve Policy makers decided they were in no rush to raise interest rates in a time when growth was slow. According to Bloomberg, the drop surprised speculators who were the most bullish on the dollar for the past six years. The divergence between the Fed, who wants to normalize rates and more than 20 central banks worldwide that cut their borrowing this year. Speculative investors cut net bullish bets on the U.S. dollar to a six month low 324,940 contracts. "The correction could go a long way, certainly much further than we’ve seen so far, you’ve seen a big swing in the sentiment," Robert Tipp, chief investment strategist for Prudential Financial Inc.’s fixed-income division in Newark, New Jersey said.