Why the U.S. Dollar Is Losing Some of Its Luster

Key takeaways:

  • The U.S. dollar’s dominance is slipping amid a highly concentrated stock market and shifting global alliances.
  • While no single currency is poised to replace the dollar, we believe investors should consider diversifying their currency exposure.
  • We think the Japanese yen offers potential safe-haven benefits.

For decades, the U.S. dollar’s dominance has rested on two pillars: America’s deep capital markets and its global security alliances. Today, both are under strain. Shifting U.S. foreign policy, rising geopolitical uncertainty, and an overextended stock market are making investors and policymakers reconsider their exposure to the greenback.

Fundamental forces have driven a stronger U.S. dollar (USD) in the last five years. After the Covid pandemic, the U.S. Federal Reserve (Fed) started raising interest rates earlier and more aggressively than most other major central banks, leading to an interest rate advantage for the USD. Energy prices spiked when Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, putting energy importers in Europe and Asia at a disadvantage to the U.S. due to America’s energy independence. Lastly, the global dominance of the U.S. technology sector and outperformance of its stock market over other regions gave rise to the notion of “U.S. exceptionalism”.

These forces have propelled the U.S. dollar’s valuation to a historically high level. Among the 10 most traded developed-market currencies, the USD is the second-richest relative to its purchasing power parity level1, only behind the Swiss franc. Another valuation metric, the real trade-weighted dollar index published by the Bank for International Settlements, suggests that the dollar is expensive compared to its long-run average (see chart). It was significantly higher only once in the last 55 years—in 1985, when the “Plaza agreement” between the U.S. and four major trading partners to deliberately push the value of the dollar down led to a multi-year dollar bear market.

USD valuation is stretched

US Real Trade Weighted Dollar