“Four forces often shape the value of the dollar: interest-rate differences, global investing demand, trade flows, and inflation expectations.” – Rob Haworth – Senior Investment Strategy, U.S. Bank
Recent swings in the dollar have exposed how dependent the global financial system is on a small set of transmission channels: relative interest rates, cross-border investment flows, trade balances, and shifting inflation expectations.1 Each channel links domestic US policy choices to conditions in the rest of the world, creating feedback loops that can reinforce or offset one another. Understanding this interplay is crucial for investors, policy makers and corporates that are effectively long or short the dollar through their portfolios, balance sheets or supply chains.1
Interest-rate differences as the primary signalling device
Interest-rate differentials are often the most visible driver of dollar moves because they directly affect the return investors earn on safe assets such as US Treasuries compared with foreign bonds.1,14 When US policy rates rise relative to other advanced economies, international capital typically flows toward US assets seeking higher yields, lifting demand for the dollar and pushing the currency higher.2,10 The theoretical transmission runs through uncovered interest parity, expressed as E_t(S_{t+1}) - S_t \approx i_t^{US} - i_t^{ROW}, where S_t is the spot exchange rate and i_t^{US}, i_t^{ROW} are policy rates in the US and the rest of the world. Although empirical deviations are common, the expectation that higher US rates justify a stronger dollar remains deeply embedded in market behaviour.9,17 In practice, this linkage is mediated by perceptions of monetary policy credibility and risk appetite. A hawkish Federal Reserve combined with relatively resilient US growth has repeatedly supported dollar strength in periods of global stress, as investors treat US assets as a high-yielding safe haven.6,19 However, once markets anticipate that the rate differential has peaked or will compress, the same mechanism can trigger sharp reversals, with capital rotating out of the dollar toward economies expected to deliver better future returns.
Global investing demand and the dollar as a safe asset
Beyond simple yield comparison, the dollar’s value reflects evolving global demand for dollar-denominated assets, particularly those regarded as safe stores of value.2,21 The currency functions not only as a medium of exchange but also as collateral in global funding markets, so changes in risk appetite or regulatory constraints can alter the convenience yield investors are willing to accept for holding dollar assets instead of higher-yielding alternatives.14,26 Research decomposing the dollar’s appreciation since 2011 attributes roughly equal weight to higher US policy rates, increased global savings, and stronger structural demand for US assets such as Treasuries and investment-grade corporate bonds.2,10 In this framework, the exchange rate can be expressed via a portfolio-balance model where the equilibrium value of S_t depends on global savings G_t, the supply of dollar assets A_t^{USD}, and the desired share of those assets in worldwide portfolios. When global savings rise faster than safe asset issuance, competition for dollar instruments intensifies, supporting an appreciation even if trade fundamentals are unchanged.2 The dollar’s status as the dominant reserve currency amplifies this effect: central banks and sovereign wealth funds allocate a large portion of their reserves to dollar assets, reinforcing demand during episodes of geopolitical uncertainty or market stress.6,21 At the same time, any credible threat to this privileged status, whether through technological disruption, alternative reserve currencies or concerns over US fiscal sustainability, would manifest first as shifts in global investing demand rather than abrupt changes in trade flows.26,28
Trade flows and the balance-of-payments constraint
Trade balances provide the second major channel through which the dollar’s value responds to underlying economic conditions, though the relationship is more nuanced than textbook models suggest.1,5 A widening US trade deficit implies that the US is importing more goods and services than it exports, which in principle increases the supply of dollars to the rest of the world.5 Under a simple balance-of-payments identity, the current account deficit must be matched by a capital account surplus, meaning foreign investors must be willing to accumulate more US assets to absorb the outward flow of dollars. If investor appetite lags behind the pace of deficit expansion, the resulting excess dollar supply tends to weaken the exchange rate. However, when US growth is strong and domestic assets are attractive, the capital inflow side of the balance can dominate, allowing the dollar to appreciate even as the trade deficit persists or widens.6,21 Trade flows also interact with the pricing behaviour of exporters and importers. A stronger dollar makes US exports more expensive in foreign currency terms and imports cheaper for US households and firms, which can gradually erode export competitiveness and reinforce external imbalances.5,8 Conversely, a weaker dollar supports export-oriented sectors and may spur reshoring or expansion of domestic manufacturing. Multinational businesses hedge these exposures through derivatives and operational adjustments, but their cumulative decisions feed back into the currency market as they manage dollar revenues, foreign expenses and cross-border funding.
Inflation expectations and the credibility of policy
Inflation expectations form the fourth key influence, connecting domestic price dynamics to the international valuation of the dollar.1,14 Expectations matter because they shape both nominal interest rates and perceptions of the real value of future dollar cash flows. If investors anticipate persistent US inflation above that of trading partners, they demand compensation in the form of higher nominal yields, but they may also mark down the expected purchasing power of the currency, producing a complex net effect on the exchange rate.14,23 Empirical work suggests that unexpected increases in inflation expectations tied to doubts about fiscal sustainability tend to depreciate the dollar, highlighting the importance of credible medium-term frameworks for managing public debt.14 One practical way markets infer inflation expectations is through Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities, where breakeven inflation rates approximate the difference between nominal yields and real yields.20 Fluctuations in these breakevens, caused both by genuine shifts in expectations and by trading flows in volatile conditions, feed directly into currency pricing models. Formally, the real interest rate relevant for exchange-rate determination can be expressed as r_t^{US} = i_t^{US} - \pi_t^{e}, where \pi_t^{e} denotes expected inflation; the dollar responds not only to changes in i_t^{US} but to any revision in \pi_t^{e} that alters the perceived real return on US assets.14,20
Interacting forces and feedback loops
Although interest-rate differences, investing demand, trade flows and inflation expectations can be described separately, in reality they form a tightly coupled system. A tightening in US monetary policy aimed at restraining inflation raises policy rates and can attract foreign capital, supporting a stronger dollar.14,24 The appreciation lowers the local-currency cost of imports, influencing consumption patterns and potentially moderating goods inflation while increasing pressure on export sectors. At the same time, capital inflows generated by higher rates can boost domestic wealth and spending, creating offsetting price pressures that complicate the central bank’s task.12 This topsey-turvy dynamic means that in some scenarios, aggressive rate hikes may unintentionally sustain inflation via capital-flow channels even as they depress growth, forcing policy makers to weigh the external effects of their decisions as carefully as the internal ones.12,24 On the structural side, prolonged periods of elevated US rates and strong demand for dollar assets may encourage foreign borrowers to take on more dollar-denominated debt, deepening global reliance on the currency and increasing vulnerability when conditions reverse.21,25 In downturns, heightened exchange-rate volatility can lead US banks to contract balance sheets and widen lending margins, transmitting dollar uncertainties back into domestic credit availability.25 These feedback loops illustrate why the dollar’s value cannot be reduced to a single explanatory variable and why changes in one of the four forces often propagate through the others.
Strategic implications and contested narratives
For investors and corporates, the strategic challenge lies in assessing which of the four forces is likely to dominate over their planning horizon. Portfolio managers must decide whether current rate differentials and inflation expectations justify structural dollar exposure or whether global investing demand is vulnerable to regime shifts such as alternative payment systems, digital currencies or evolving geopolitical blocs.2,26,28 Exporters and importers face operational choices around invoicing currencies, hedging strategies and production locations, all of which depend on their view of trade flows and the durability of US policy frameworks. Policy makers, meanwhile, debate whether the dollar’s strength is primarily a function of domestic fundamentals or of global imbalances that could unwind abruptly, especially if fiscal trajectories or political risks undermine confidence.14,28 Critics argue that reliance on the dollar-centric order imposes costs on emerging markets, exposing them to external shocks driven by US rate cycles and risk sentiment rather than local conditions.8,21 Proponents counter that the depth and liquidity of dollar markets, combined with the institutional resilience of US monetary and legal systems, continue to justify the currency’s central role.6,28 The result is an ongoing tension between narratives of inevitable dollar decline and those of entrenched dominance, with each new episode of market volatility interpreted through these lenses.
Why the four forces matter now
Against this backdrop, framing dollar valuation through the interplay of interest-rate differences, global investing demand, trade flows and inflation expectations offers a practical roadmap for understanding current moves and stress-testing future scenarios.1 It emphasises that neither individual data releases nor headline events can be interpreted in isolation. A surprise change in US rates may matter less if global savings remain ample and demand for safe assets is strong; conversely, a modest policy adjustment could trigger outsized currency shifts if it coincides with deteriorating inflation expectations or abrupt changes in trade policy.2,6,14 For long-term investors, the framework reinforces the importance of diversification across currencies and asset classes, recognising that short-term exchange-rate swings can meaningfully affect returns on foreign holdings but that these effects tend to average out over longer horizons.1,7 For corporates, the same logic supports disciplined hedging and strategic flexibility in supply chains, reducing vulnerability to sudden shifts in any one of the four forces. Ultimately, the dollar’s path will continue to reflect a complex negotiation between domestic policy choices, global financial preferences, real economic flows and collective beliefs about future inflation. Reading that negotiation through these four lenses does not eliminate uncertainty, but it clarifies where the most important pressures are likely to originate and how they may converge in the next phase of the currency cycle.
References
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