A Coiled Spring: The Dollar’s Next Move

Kristian Kerr | Head of Macro Strategy

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The dollar holds a central place in global markets due to its role as the world’s reserve currency. Its movements influence cross-asset correlations, shape liquidity conditions, and often offer early indications of shifts in the broader macro regime. In short, it is a critical variable that warrants close attention.

Over the past 11 months, the U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) has traded within a relatively tight five percent range, a notable period of consolidation. More importantly, there are now early signs of a breakout, with price action beginning to push higher and move beyond the confines of the recent range. Equally significant is that throughout the recent period of consolidation, the dollar repeatedly threatened to break the secular uptrend that has been in place since 2011, and despite numerous attempts to move lower, the dollar never really cracked.

From a technical standpoint, this current setup is constructive. Breakouts from extended consolidations often see meaningful follow through, particularly when they emerge from a backdrop of compressed volatility. And as highlighted in the Dollar Index chart, foreign exchange (FX) volatility has been notably subdued recently with several measures of currency volatility reaching near four-year lows. Given the mean reverting nature of volatility, that kind of compression often behaves like a coiled spring, and when it releases, the resulting moves are often both sharp and persistent.

Dollar Index Showing Signs of a Breakout, But FX Volatility Remains a Wildcard

Line graph comparing the U.S. Dollar Index to the Currency Volatility Index from 2011 to year to date, highlighting dollar index showing signs of a breakout, but FX volatility remains a wildcard.

Source: LPL Research, Bloomberg 06/26/26
Disclosure: All indexes are unmanaged and cannot be invested in directly. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.

In terms of levels, a sustained move through 103 on the DXY would go a long way toward confirming that a more durable bottom is in place. That would shift the balance of risks higher, and potentially even signal the resumption of the secular dollar uptrend. But a move like that would not occur in isolation. It would carry important cross asset implications. For instance, historical periods of dollar strength have been associated with relative outperformance of U.S. equities versus the rest of the world.

On the fundamental side, the recent firming in the dollar has not occurred without support. The U.S. continues to maintain a meaningful rate advantage relative to other G10 economies. At the same time, the Federal Reserve (Fed) has leaned more hawkish at the margin, while incoming U.S. economic data has continued to show signs of improvement. The combination of relative policy stance and a resilient growth backdrop have helped underpin the recent move higher in the dollar. That said, the policy side is not without risk. While markets continue to price the potential for further Fed tightening, actually delivering additional hikes may prove to be a high bar. The gap between market expectations and realized policy will be something to watch closely. In our view, the key risk to this developing uptrend in the dollar would be a shift in tone from the Fed back toward a more definitive neutral posture, as any softening in policy expectations would likely take some of the support out from under the currency.

On the downside, there are a couple of key levels to note. A move back below the 200-day moving average, which sits near 99.00, would raise concerns that the recent strength is just another false start of many over the past year. A deeper decline through 95.50 would reopen the case for a broader secular shift lower. For now, the weight of the evidence suggests the path of least resistance for the dollar is higher. If that view is correct, the implications will extend well beyond FX and into the broader macro landscape.

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Kristian Kerr

Kristian Kerr drives the broad, house investment strategy for LPL Financial Research. His career includes over 25 years of industry experience.