The US dollar index (USDX) is an important analytical tool for
traders in just about any market. The USDX is actually a futures
contract which means that if you have a futures trading account you
could trade this instrument like corn, oil, gold or currency futures
contracts. However rather than trading the USDX most retail traders use
it as way to analyze the relative strength or weakness of the US Dollar
in general.
The USDX compares the US dollar (USD) against a basket of other world
currencies. This basket represents most of the largest free floating,
major currencies in the world on a weighted average basis. The
currencies included are the euro, yen, British pound, Canadian dollar,
Swedish krona and Swiss franc. Each of these currencies are given a
weight within the index with the largest weight given to the euro.
The euro is typically half the total weight included in the average
the chart for the USDX and will often look like a chart of the USD/EUR
futures contract. Spot forex traders will notice that the USDX is very
similar to an inverse of the EUR/USD spot forex pair. However, because
the USDX includes 6 different currencies it is a better measure of USD
strength than any single currency pair including the EUR/USD.
The USDX was established in 1973 with a starting value of 100. That
means that if the USDX is measuring less than 100 the USD has lost
relative value compared to what it was worth in 1973 and if it is above
100 then the USD is stronger than it was in 1973. Currently the USDX is
hovering around 82, which means that it is 18% weaker than its starting
value. The dollar has not always been weaker than it was in 1973, the
USDX showed a 20% improvement in value in the USD in 2001 and 2002.
The USDX is particularly useful for traders in the bond, currency and
gold markets. For example, a strong USD is usually correlated with
falling gold prices, which means that gold traders are very interested
in a break out on the USDX even though they may not be trading the USD
directly. Similarly, global crises often increase demand for the USD as
investors seek a shelter from uncertainty. This will drive the value of
the USD up and often bond yields will drop. These are just two examples
of how the USDX is one more inter-market tool you can use for evaluating
capital flows and finding new trading opportunities.
Charts for the USDX on the pairs analysis pages in the forex section
of the Learning Markets website but if you are interested in trading the
USDX you have two attractive alternatives. First, you can open a
futures account. There are futures and options on futures available on
the USDX that trade on the New York Board of Trade.
Second you can trade ETFs that track the USDX itself. PowerShares
offers two ETF alternatives for trading the index. The first is UUP
which invests in long futures contracts on the USDX, which means it will
move the same direction as the dollar index. The second is UDN which
invests in short futures contracts on the USDX, which means that it will
rise in value when the dollar index weakens. If you are bullish the
dollar you could buy UUP and if you are bearish the dollar you could buy
UDN.
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