QUESTION: You said the Dollar Index is not valid because it was based on trade 30 years ago. I seem to recall you had your own index. Would you explain the difference and how has this performed lately?
Thank you
GF
ANSWER: The index we use is based, not on trade, but capital flows. To reflect the world rather than just a microcosm, we include 14 currencies compared to the trade-skewed Dollar Index that was crafted back in March 1973, which includes:
-
- Euro (EUR), 57.6% weight
- Japanese yen (JPY) 13.6% weight
- Pound sterling (GBP), 11.9% weight
- Canadian dollar (CAD), 9.1% weight
- Swedish krona (SEK), 4.2% weight
- Swiss franc (CHF) 3.6% weight
The Dollar Index we created is based on capital flows rather than trade. Our base year of 1900 equals 100. The countries included:
-
- Australia Dollar
- Brazil Real
- British Pound
- Canadian Dollar
- China Yuan
- Europe Euro
- Japanese Yen
- Mexico Peso
- Norway Krone
- Russia Ruble
- Singapore Dollar
- South Korea Won
- Swiss Franc
- Thailand Baht
We can see that the dollar is consolidating. When we look at the dollar from a broader perspective, the trend becomes much clearer.