While our crystal ball is as blurry as the next one, we don’t think the US Dollar is at risk of losing its status as the world’s reserve currency – even if any number of countries would like to see that happen. Three months on from that note, the US Dollar remains on the back foot, and its weakness now seems to be much more of a point of concern, with many investors wondering if the closer relationship between Russia and China and Saudi Arabia’s willingness to consider trading in currencies besides the US Dollar means the days of the US Dollar serving as the world’s reserve currency might be coming to an end. At the time, the weakness in the US Dollar seemed more of a curiosity than anything else and a development that we ascribed to several pretty straightforward and pretty benign economic developments, including the Federal Reserve being closer to the end of its rate hiking cycle than the beginning ex-US central banks becoming more hawkish and an improvement in fundamentals for key economies around the world, including lower energy prices in Western Europe. When we took pen to paper in January, the US Dollar had corrected about 10% from a late 2022 high that also marked a 20+ year high for the Greenback relative to a basket of other currencies. Three months ago to the day, we published a note that took a look at the recent weakness in the US Dollar (What Ails The US Dollar – January 17, 2023).
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