Chart Of The Day: Dollar Reigns As Markets Crash; But Will It Go Higher?

 | Mar 19, 2020 14:51

There have been two previous, major financial markets crashes in the past 20 years. During both, the U.S. dollar became the life raft of choice that everyone wanted to cling to.

The more recent, 2008 crisis saw the S&P 500 Index fall 57.69% between the high of October 2007 and the low of March 2009. Five months later, the Dollar Index accelerated, going from the March 2008 low to the March 2009 high to add 26.76%.

The earlier, 2001-2002, collapse saw the S&P 500 decline 50.5% between its March 2000 peak and its October 2002 trough. At that time, the dollar’s bottom preceded that of the SPX top. The USD moved from the low of October 1999 to the top of July 2001, gaining 24.08%, from bottom to top.

On Monday we forecast that now, the dollar will ultimately repeat its pattern of becoming the quintessential safe haven asset amid this ongoing market crash. We did think, however, that it would fall before it rose, since it was trading according to a broadening pattern, which sets up the dynamics for a fall.

We expected the dollar would bounce off the bottom of the generally bearish pattern, using it as a springboard to break through its ceiling and beyond. But that's not what happened. Investors didn’t want to wait that long and provided an upside breakout quicker than we anticipated.

Does that mean that the dollar’s path is now clear to just keep rising from here on out?