Chart Of The Day: The U.S. Dollar Is Coming Back

 | Aug 03, 2017 10:30AM ET

By Pinchas Cohen

We’ve discussed at length the ways in which market structure has broken down since the US elections. We've pointed out that equities, gold and bonds shouldn’t all rise in tandem. Equities rise on business growth; gold and bonds rise on both lower interest rates and risk-off sentiment, both of which are contrary to a stronger business climate.

The one asset we haven’t mentioned here, but which has become a central player, often focused on by the financial media right now, is the US dollar. The reason we haven't included it as one of the responsive assets listed above is because it is in fact the asset that is driving the responses of the other vehicles.

It's the glue in the current investment landscape. Perhaps, it is no longer the glue but rather the agent of destruction. The catalyst that has been breaking the longstanding, reliable market structure, leaving so many great analysts and money managers at a loss—for both words and profits.

We have also analyzed at length the reasons for the dollar’s prolonged decline, both economically and politically.

Since Donald Trump came to power, whether deliberately or not, it's no secret the dollar has had a target on its green back after he claimed that the strong dollar was killing the US. After he said that, the dollar began its descent; his actions continued to pummel the currency further, pushing it even lower.