Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT
You have a preview view of this article while we are checking your access. When we have confirmed access, the full article content will load.

A Strong U.S. Dollar Weighs on the World

Where Currencies Are

Falling Around the World

Year-to-date percentage change in the value of each country’s official currency against the U.S. dollar.

Britain

–1.6%

South

Korea

–6.5%

Eurozone

–3.0%

Japan

–10.0%

China

–2.1%

Australia

–3.9%

South Africa

–1.9%

Canada

–3.4%

Mexico

–0.6%

Brazil

–5.0%

Argentina

–7.7%

Where Currencies Are Falling Around the World

Year-to-date percentage change in the value of each country’s official currency against the U.S. dollar.

Canada

–3.4%

Britain

–1.6%

South

Korea

–6.5%

Eurozone

–3.0%

Japan

–10.0%

China

–2.1%

Mexico

–0.6%

Brazil

–5.0%

Australia

–3.9%

South Africa

–1.9%

Argentina

–7.3%

Where Currencies Are Falling Around the World

Year-to-date percentage change in the value of each country’s official currency against the U.S. dollar.

Britain

–1.6%

South

Korea

–6.5%

Canada

–3.4%

Eurozone

–3.0%

Japan

–10.0%

China

–2.1%

Mexico

–0.6%

Brazil

–5.0%

Australia

–3.9%

South Africa

–1.9%

Argentina

–7.7%

Source: FactSet

By Karl Russell

Every major currency in the world has fallen against the U.S. dollar this year, an unusually broad shift with the potential for serious consequences across the global economy.

Two-thirds of the roughly 150 currencies tracked by Bloomberg have weakened against the dollar, whose recent strength stems from a shift in expectations about when and by how much the Federal Reserve may cut its benchmark interest rate, which sits around a 20-year high.

High Fed rates, a response to stubborn inflation, mean that American assets offer better returns than much of the world, and investors need dollars to buy them. In recent months, money has flowed into the United States with a force that’s being felt by policymakers, politicians and people from Brussels to Beijing, Toronto to Tokyo.

The dollar index, a common way to gauge the general strength of the U.S. currency against a basket of its major trading partners, is hovering at levels last seen in the early 2000s (when U.S. interest rates were also similarly high).

The yen is at a 34-year low against the U.S. dollar. The euro and Canadian dollar are sagging. The Chinese yuan has shown notable signs of weakness, despite officials’ stated intent to stabilize it.

“It has never been truer that the Fed is the world’s central bank,” said Jesse Rogers, an economist at Moody’s Analytics.

120

U.S. dollar index

110

Monthly

100

90

Stronger

dollar

80

70

2000

’05

’10

’15

’20

’24

120

U.S. dollar index

110

Monthly

100

90

Stronger

dollar

80

70

2000

’05

’10

’15

’20

’24

Source: Refinitiv

By The New York Times


Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Times account, or subscribe for all of The Times.


Thank you for your patience while we verify access.

Already a subscriber? Log in.

Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT