If history is our teacher, it tells us that the dollar does respond to any crisis for a few months or so typically after the economy hits another rough patch. However, afterwards, it reverts back to the trend at hand.
If it went into the crisis in a downtrend, then it goes back into it again. And if it went into the crisis in an uptrend, then it tends to revert back to that uptrend too.
If history is any indication, then it’s very possible the dollar will simply continue the downtrend it’s been in for the past six years: crisis or no crisis.
But due to additional factors - namely the dollar being at a 30-year low point at the beginning of this predicament - I don’t think it’s going to be a very clear downtrend. At least not in the short-term.
I see the dollar ‘ranging’ (Forex speak for going nowhere at all) over the next few years, much like it did after the S&L crisis, as you can see below.
Bank Failures Mean the Bumpy Ride Will Continue

This is what I believe may happen this time as well. However, on a year-over-year basis, it won’t feel like a wide range. It will feel like very strong, sharp uptrends. It’s only when you look back on this era over 10-15 years that you may see the dollar ranged for several years after - what shall we call it? Perhaps - “The Bailout Crisis of 2008.”



