US Dollar Index and Major Currency Pairs
The US Dollar Index distills the dollar's strength against a basket of currencies, and every major FX pair reacts to it in predictable ways.
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US Dollar Index and Major Currency Pairs
If you trade any major currency pair, you are implicitly trading the dollar. The US Dollar Index (DXY) is the single most useful macro overlay for an FX trader, and most beginners ignore it completely.
What DXY actually is
DXY is a weighted basket of the dollar against six currencies:
- EUR — 57.6% (the index is dominated by EUR/USD)
- JPY — 13.6%
- GBP — 11.9%
- CAD — 9.1%
- SEK — 4.2%
- CHF — 3.6%
Because the euro is more than half the basket, DXY often moves as a mirror image of EUR/USD. When DXY breaks out, EUR/USD almost always breaks down. That single fact reframes how you read either chart.
How each pair reacts to DXY
Every major pair has a known relationship to the dollar index:
- EUR/USD — the primary driver, near-perfect inverse correlation
- GBP/USD — follows EUR/USD direction but with idiosyncratic UK noise
- USD/JPY — positively correlated to DXY; when the dollar strengthens, USD/JPY tends to rise
- USD/CHF — strongly positively correlated to DXY
- AUD/USD, NZD/USD — inversely correlated but also driven by their own commodity and risk cycles
- USD/CAD — positively correlated, but oil often overrides
The practical use
Before you take a USD pair trade, look at DXY. If DXY is sitting on a major weekly support and showing bullish momentum, you have a structural reason to favor long USD trades and fade USD weakness. If DXY is breaking down through a multi-month level, the opposite is true.
A common setup is a DXY-pair divergence: DXY makes a new high but EUR/USD refuses to make a new low. That divergence often precedes a reversal. The pair is telling you the dollar's strength is exhausted.
Currency strength meters are not a substitute
Retail "currency strength" indicators sum up short-term momentum across pairs. They're noisy and lag. DXY is a real, tradeable instrument with futures, options, and clear levels. When in doubt, trust the actual index chart over a computed strength meter.
Watch the euro's weight
Because EUR is 57.6% of DXY, any EUR-specific event — an ECB meeting, a French election, an Italian debt scare — will move DXY independently of the dollar's true strength. In those windows, DXY stops being a clean dollar read. Cross-check with gold or TIPS yields if you need a second opinion.
The bottom line
DXY is the macro compass for every major FX pair. Pull it up before you trade, mark the key levels, and let it confirm or veto your bias. Trade with the dollar at your back, not in your face.
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