🎉 Share Your 2025 Year-End Summary & Win $10,000 Sharing Rewards!
Reflect on your year with Gate and share your report on Square for a chance to win $10,000!
👇 How to Join:
1️⃣ Click to check your Year-End Summary: https://www.gate.com/competition/your-year-in-review-2025
2️⃣ After viewing, share it on social media or Gate Square using the "Share" button
3️⃣ Invite friends to like, comment, and share. More interactions, higher chances of winning!
🎁 Generous Prizes:
1️⃣ Daily Lucky Winner: 1 winner per day gets $30 GT, a branded hoodie, and a Gate × Red Bull tumbler
2️⃣ Lucky Share Draw: 10
A comprehensive explanation of the US Dollar Index (DXY): Why should you pay attention to the global capital flow indicator?
Is the US Dollar Index Really That Important?
If you’ve been paying attention to the news, you’ve probably heard phrases like: “The US Dollar Index hits a new high” or “The dollar continues to strengthen.” But what does this actually mean? Why can an invisible “index” influence the stock market, forex market, and even your USD assets?
The truth is quite simple — the US Dollar Index is like a “thermometer” for the global financial markets. Since the dollar is the world’s most commonly used trading currency, most international commodities, energy, gold, and even global investments are priced in USD. When the US Dollar Index changes, it triggers a chain reaction.
What exactly is the US Dollar Index (DXY)?
Rather than calling it a “price,” it’s better described as a “relative strength indicator.”
Imagine:
These six currencies are:
In simple terms, the US Dollar Index measures whether the dollar is appreciating or depreciating relative to other major currencies. A higher value indicates a stronger dollar; a lower value indicates a weaker dollar.
How do rises and falls in the US Dollar Index affect your investments?
When the US Dollar Index rises
The dollar appreciates, summarized in one sentence: “The dollar gets stronger, capital flows back to the US.”
What effects does this have?
For export-driven economies like Taiwan:
When the US Dollar Index falls
The dollar weakens, and other currencies appreciate. How does market sentiment respond?
But note: If you hold USD assets (US stocks, US bonds, USD deposits), a weaker dollar means you get fewer NT dollars when converting back, which is the “exchange loss” risk.
What factors drive changes in the US Dollar Index?
1. Federal Reserve interest rate policy
The most direct driver is the Fed’s interest rate decisions.
This is why every Fed meeting can trigger significant market volatility.
2. US economic data
Non-farm payrolls, unemployment rate, CPI inflation, GDP growth — these are confidence indicators.
Strong economic data → market optimism about the dollar → USD Index rises Weak economic data → market confidence drops → USD Index falls
3. Geopolitical events and risk aversion
Wars, political instability, regional conflicts… such events trigger global risk aversion. The dollar, as the safest haven asset, often rises during crises. This explains why sometimes “the more chaotic, the stronger the dollar.”
4. Performance of other currencies
Remember, the USD Index is a “relative value” of the dollar versus six foreign currencies.
Even if the dollar itself doesn’t change, if the euro or yen depreciate due to economic weakness or loose policies, the USD Index will rise accordingly.
How does the US Dollar Index interact with other assets?
US Dollar Index and Gold
This is the classic “see-saw” relationship:
But gold prices are also influenced by inflation, wars, and oil prices, so don’t rely solely on the dollar.
US Dollar Index and US Stocks
The relationship is more complex, depending on underlying economic logic:
For example, in 2020, during the March global stock market crash, the USD Index soared to 103 (risk aversion). But as the pandemic spread and the Fed printed money aggressively, the dollar quickly dropped to 93.78. Context is key to understanding these movements.
US Dollar Index and Taiwan stocks / New Taiwan Dollar
The general pattern is:
But this isn’t a strict rule. Sometimes, the entire global market is optimistic, and US stocks, Taiwan stocks, and the dollar all rise together; during black swan events, everyone panics, and stocks, forex, and bonds may all decline simultaneously.
USD Index vs. Trade-Weighted US Dollar Index: Which is more accurate?
These two concepts are often confused, but they are fundamentally different.
US Dollar Index (DXY)
Trade-Weighted US Dollar Index
In simple terms: The DXY is a traditional indicator, quick to gauge market sentiment. But if you’re doing macroeconomic research or forex trading and want to understand Fed policy logic, the trade-weighted index is a deeper reference.
How is the US Dollar Index calculated?
The USD Index uses a “geometric weighted average” method. The logic is:
The result is a relative index:
Therefore, a higher USD Index indicates a stronger dollar; a lower index indicates a weaker dollar on the international stage.
How should investors apply this knowledge?
Understanding the USD Index helps you to:
Whether you’re trading forex, investing in US stocks, or just want to understand NT dollar trends, mastering the USD Index is essential. It acts like a wind vane for global capital flows; observing its fluctuations helps you better understand market dynamics.