The Dollar Will Weaken, But Not Yet

Summary & Key Takeaways

  • Over the long-term, the fundamentals of the dollar suggest a downward bias is likely.

  • Likewise, sentiment and positioning remain elevated to levels indicative of long-term tops.

  • However, over the short to medium-term, the growth cycle outlook and technical picture are supportive of continued dollar strength.

  • It is still too soon to call the next bear market for the greenback.

Fundamentals - short-term tailwinds facing long-term headwinds

2022 saw phenomenal strength in the US dollar, the kind of strength that has a habit of hindering international trade, commerce and growth in a classic self-reflexive cycle. Being one of the most important variables to global asset allocation, having an opinion as to where the dollar is headed over the short and medium-term affords investors a significant advantage and should be an integral part of one’s investing framework.

For now, the outlook for the dollar appears somewhat mixed. Fundamentally, the outlook is probably best described as the clashing of short-term tailwinds in the face of medium to long-term headwinds. For currencies, fundamentals largely consist of factor such as fiscal and trade balances, as well as valuation measures based around purchasing power parity. Indeed, on most currency valuation models the dollar appears overvalued, as we can see below.

Source: Mark Investments

While this has little to no bearing on short or even medium-term movements, it is likely to influence the broad directional trajectory of the dollar over the next few years. This works in a similar manner to how valuations drive long-term stock returns, and is illustrated brilliantly in the below chart from BCA Research.

Source: Peter Berenzin - BCA Research