The Fall Of The U.S. Dollar Creates A Potent, Bullish Cocktail For Commodities

 | Aug 04, 2020 09:49AM ET

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

  • US dollar falls through critical technical support
  • Metals are watching the greenback
  • Energy and agricultural prices are also sensitive
  • 2008-2011 could be a sign that a weaker dollar will turbocharge commodity prices

The US dollar is the global reserve currency. That status is allocated to the foreign exchange instrument that the world perceives as the most stable from an economic and political perspective. Central banks hold reserve currencies for international commerce and balance of trade reasons.

As the leading reserve foreign exchange instrument, the dollar is also the international pricing benchmark for commodities. A rising dollar tends to weigh on raw material prices, while a falling dollar often causes commodity prices to move higher.

The Dollar Index measures the value of the USD against other leading reserve foreign exchange instruments. Since the euro is also a reserve currency, the index has an over 57% exposure to the European single currency.

The Dollar Index reached a low of 88.15 in February 2018. It rose to a high of 103.96 in late March during the risk-off conditions caused by the global COVID-19 pandemic.

Since then, the index has turned lower and broke through critical technical support levels. The decline of the US dollar has been one factor driving many commodity prices higher.

h2 US dollar falls through critical technical support/h2

Last week, the Dollar Index fell below a level that could be a gateway for a test of the February 2018 low.