Behind the sharp drop in the US dollar index: How dovish shift is reshaping global asset allocation?

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The recent performance of the US Dollar Index (DXY) has prompted the market to reconsider the future direction of monetary policy. Driven by the dovish decision from the Federal Reserve, the dollar has weakened, touching a low of 98.313, with a cumulative depreciation of over 9% this year. However, behind this dollar weakness lies a more complex issue—what exactly is the market re-pricing?

Outlook for the US Dollar Based on Rate Cut Expectations

Last Wednesday, the Federal Reserve decided to cut interest rates by 25 bps to a range of 3.50%-3.75%, but the most critical signal from this decision was not the rate cut itself, but Chairman Powell’s hints about future policy. He stated at the press conference that the Fed has cut rates by 175 bps and is now in a neutral rate range, with economic developments determining the next steps—this wording was interpreted by the market as dovish.

Interestingly, the Fed’s new dot plot maintained a median expectation of only one rate cut in 2025, but market pricing indicates investors expect two cuts (about 50 bps). This discrepancy has directly pressured the dollar lower. UBS FX strategists note that the market initially expected a stronger dollar, but the relatively dovish stance of the Fed, combined with the hawkish turn by the Reserve Bank of Australia, Bank of Canada, and European Central Bank, has created a stark contrast. Additionally, the Fed announced it will start purchasing $40 billion of short-term government bonds from mid-December to inject liquidity, further diminishing the dollar’s safe-haven appeal.

How Does Dollar Weakness Reassess Various Asset Classes?

Dollar depreciation, seemingly a simple exchange rate event, has actually triggered a chain reaction in global asset prices.

Beneficiaries: Tech Stocks and Export Companies: A 1% decline in the dollar can boost earnings of tech stocks by about 5 bps, especially benefiting multinational corporations. This explains why the S&P 500 Tech sector has gained over 20% year-to-date, even as individual stocks face earnings volatility, the sector as a whole remains supported.

Gold Reaching New Highs—Underlying Drivers: As a traditional safe-haven asset, gold has surged 47% this year, breaking through $4,200/oz to hit a record high. The drivers include central banks purchasing over 1,000 tons (led by China and India) and a surge in ETF inflows. The weakening dollar amplifies global demand for inflation hedging.

Emerging Markets as the Biggest Winners: The MSCI Emerging Markets Index has risen 23% this year, with countries like South Korea and South Africa seeing gains driven by strong corporate earnings and the falling dollar. Goldman Sachs research indicates that dollar weakness has spurred a large influx of funds into emerging market bonds and equities, with currencies like the Brazilian real leading global gains.

However, there are double-edged effects: dollar depreciation also pushes up commodity prices (e.g., crude oil up 10%), which could exacerbate inflation concerns; if US stocks overheat, high-beta assets may experience amplified volatility.

Will the Dollar Continue to Weaken?

In the short term, dollar weakness has become the main trend, but this is not a one-sided story. The key variable is upcoming economic data releases.

If December CPI and employment data come in strong (with the market expecting December 18 CPI release), intra-Fed disagreements could shift toward a hawkish stance—three members have already opposed rate cuts at this meeting. Jefferies economists say the probability of a rate cut at the January meeting is 50/50, with employment data being the pivot. Strong labor market data could change market expectations about the pace of rate cuts, pushing the dollar index back toward the 100 level.

Additionally, the widening US fiscal deficit and government shutdown concerns (despite a recent extension in November) could temporarily support dollar safe-haven demand.

Analysts warn that the market is currently in a phase of monetary policy re-evaluation. In the short term, the probability of a weaker dollar is higher (a Reuters poll shows 73% of analysts expect the dollar to weaken by year-end), but the long-term trend depends on the depth of economic slowdown. Investors are advised to diversify into non-US currencies and gold, and avoid excessive leverage exposure to manage volatility.

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