Ever since the start of 2017, the dollar has been in an almost constant
decline.
In fact, the PowerShares DB U.S. Dollar Bullish ETF (NYSE: UUP) has
dropped over 12% from its 2017 highs, despite a 2% gain.
UUP is an exchange-traded fund that measures the dollar against six
other currencies. When the dollar strengthens relative to the others, the price
of UUP goes up.
Generally, the dollar is seen as a haven, somewhere for investors to put
their money in times of market uncertainty. And since we have seen a market
that went straight up over a 15-month period, there was less demand for safety
assets like the dollar.
But that can only last so long. Right now, there is a fear of inflation
in the markets due to higher employment and wages.
When the economy is strong, inflation usually follows. That is because
when people make more money, they spend more. And when more money is spent, there
is more in circulation, and the excess supply makes each dollar less valuable.
However, inflation fears are likely overblown since we have not seen an
economy this strong since before the financial crash.
When inflation gets too high, it sends production costs up and business
slows. But right now, inflation remains steady around 2%.
That may seem high, as it was around 0% for all of 2015 and some of
2016, but in the big picture, it is normal. In fact, it is seen as healthy.
As a reference, inflation had gotten over 4% in 2005 and 2006, right as
the economy showed signs of slowing.
Many are wondering how to profit from this analysis.
Demand for the Dollar
The dollar could easily get stronger from here as well.
Right now, a huge part of the world's economy has extremely low interest
rates. Much of Europe, for example, is under 1%, and they aren't planning on
raising rates aggressively anytime soon.
The United States, however, has a rate of 1.5%. This isn't high, but we
could easily see that go over 2% this year if the economy stays healthy.
That would also increase the rate of government bonds, which is 2.86%
right now. As the rate get higher, international investors will begin to buy
more U.S. bonds, which increases demand for the dollar and sends its value up.
How to Profit
Even though the only way to directly invest in the strength of the
dollar is through UUP, there are other ways with higher return potential.
One is buying call options on the UUP fund, but that is much riskier, as
you could lose your whole investment.
Another way would be buying a leveraged ETF against a different
currency.
For example, the VelocityShares Daily 4X Long USD vs. EUR ETF
(NYSE: DEUR) returns four times the percentage that the dollar appreciates
against the euro.
There are also similar funds that produce the return of the dollar
against other currencies, like the pound (NYSE: DGBP), the
yen (NYSE: DJPY) and the Australian dollar (NYSE:
DAUD).
Ian Dyer is one of the top internal analysts for Banyan Hill Publishing.
He graduated from Duquesne University with a degree in finance. He has passed
the Level 1 and 2 CFA exams to become a Level 2 CFA and will soon complete the
final Level 3 exam. Becoming a Level 3 CFA demonstrates an analyst's thorough
command of economics, accounting, portfolio management, stock, and bond
valuation, and more. For the last few years, Ian has utilized these skills to
analyze valuable investment recommendations for Banyan Hill's 300,000 readers.
Read more here.
Article Source: By Martin Straith

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