Here's What's Wrong With USD

 | Feb 17, 2017 01:52PM ET

Imagine if, at the start of the week, I had told you the following:

  • Top-tier US data would be unanimously strong, with solid readings on inflation (CPI and PPI), retail sales, and a 30-year high in the Philly Fed Manufacturing index.
  • After focusing his early efforts on controversial immigration and trade measures, President Trump would pivot to emphasizing fiscal stimulus, including the imminent announcement of a "phenomenal" tax reform plan
  • Fed Chair Janet Yellen would be surprisingly hawkish in her semi-annual testimony, noting that it was "unwise to wait too long" to raise interest rates...
  • ...and that the market-implied odds of a March rate hike would correspondingly rise by 10%

You would probably expect the US dollar to be trading substantially higher on the week, wouldn't you? I would!

Instead, the world's reserve currency has been mixed, edging higher against the commodity currencies and pound, essentially unchanged against the euro and Swiss franc, and actually losing ground against the yen. Indeed, the dichotomy between ostensibly strong US data and a weak US dollar stretches back to the start of the year; since New Year's Day, the greenback is actually the worst-performing major currency.