WSJ Your Money Briefing - How the Strength of the U.S. Dollar Impacts Your Investment Portfolio
Episode Date: June 17, 2025Uncertainty around the economy, from tariffs to trade wars, has sunk the value of the dollar to its weakest level in years. Certain stocks do better when the dollar is weak while others perform worse.... Host Oyin Adedoyin talks with finance professor Derek Horstmeyer about how investors can position their portfolio, depending on whether the dollar rebounds or continues to fall. Sign up for the WSJ's free Markets A.M. newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Here's your money briefing for Tuesday, June 17th. I'm Oyen Adedoyin for The Wall Street
Journal.
The U.S. dollar is one of the most powerful currencies in the world.
Recently, its value has been dropping.
That has implications for investors.
There is so much speculation now about whether the dollar and our T-bills and our long-term
debt are still the safest assets in the world to pile into.
And with all of this uncertainty regarding tariffs, it's a really important thing to
watch.
We'll talk with finance professor Derek Horstmeier about why we should all be keeping
an eye on the U.S. dollar right now.
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The U.S. dollar has tumbled in value over the past few months.
Amid tariff turbulence and economic uncertainty,
many on Wall Street are hoping that the trade deals the US
is striking with other countries will help the dollar bounce back.
Derek Horstmeier is a professor of finance
at George Mason University.
He also wrote a recent piece for the Wall Street Journal
where he and his team ran the numbers on how some stocks
perform when the dollar weakens. the Wall Street Journal where he and his team ran the numbers on how some stocks perform
when the dollar weakens.
Derek, before we go into what this means for investors, why should our listeners care about
the dollar falling in value?
Well, the dollar falling has a significant impact on risk assets in our economy.
First off, we see that if the dollar falls in value, international
stocks seem to do the best. Vice versa, if the dollar increases in value, we see
that US small caps tend to do the best. That's pretty interesting.
Historically, what is the relationship between stocks and the dollar? I'm trying
to get a better understanding of why we see this inverse relationship.
In general, if the US dollar goes down,
the reason why we see international stocks do better
is purely an exchange rate phenomenon.
If you have an international stock
and they, let's say, are mostly operating in euros,
once they convert their euros over to a weaker dollar
Here in the u.s. We see those stock prices go up because obviously our u.s. Markets are quoted in u.s. Dollars
So for investors who are concerned about the dollar going down
Where should they have their money right now?
The biggest spread that we see between when the dollar goes up and when the dollar goes
down again is in international stocks.
So this would be foreign ETFs, US dollar denominated.
So if you can find an ETF that tracks European companies or Asian companies or even a large
conglomerate of companies that typically is the best. So in such cases
we would see if the dollar went up in a given month international stocks here in
the US tend to move just about 0% so they don't move at all but if the dollar
goes down in a given month international stocks move about 2.5% so that's the
biggest spread that we saw in our results. That's fascinating
How about those who are holding out hope the dollar is going to bounce back?
If the dollar bounces back your best bet is to stay local. So this is companies that
Produce and have their revenue here in the US the best bet there are usually US small cap
So let's say like the Russell 2000.
In those cases, we see companies that are operating locally,
don't have much foreign revenue, produce and operate here in the US.
Those are the best bets for a strong dollar.
Can you give me some idea as to what types of stocks perform best when the dollar is weak? The one area of the economy that does really, really well when the dollar is down or weakening
are commodity stocks.
Commodity stocks usually moves inverse to dollar strength.
So you can imagine copper stocks, silver, gold, any sort of hard commodity.
I'm curious why commodities are different.
Commodities are measures of fear.
We would include gold in that scenario.
So if the dollar is weakening,
it usually means people are piling into gold.
So we see an inverse relationship in that scenario.
How does the bond market perform when the dollar strengthens versus when it weakens?
We see similar results when we look at the bond market.
Across the board, again, bonds tend to do a little bit better when the dollar decreases in value.
Your best bets if you see the dollar weaken is in long-term debt or in high-yield debt.
And we think the fundamental reason there is when the dollar weakens a lot of times that means rate cuts might be coming.
So your long-term debt and your high-yield debt tends to do best when there is an expectation of rate cuts.
So kind of looking back at everything,
why is it so important for us to watch the dollar right now?
What makes the dollar unique amongst the world's other currencies?
There is so much speculation now about whether the dollar
and our T-bills and our long-term debt
are still the safest assets in the world to pile into.
And with all of this uncertainty regarding tariffs and everything else, I think it's
a really important thing to watch.
One really unique thing that we saw over the past month or two is that the dollar, stocks, and bonds all move
together, which is a very rare phenomenon. So the dollar weakened, stocks weakened,
and bonds weakened, and that's a really rare phenomenon that you usually only
see in emerging market economies. So that is something to watch if that is a one-off or if that will continue to
repeat itself. What is the rule of thumb for anxious investors right now? I've
talked to a lot of investors in recent months who are just super stressed about
where the economy is going and who are really uncertain. I would say don't
overreact. We know that investors tend to overreact to really negative news and that costs investors
two to three percent by some estimates to their returns on an annual basis, which is
very significant.
That would be selling at the bottom and buying at the top and that again is due to overreaction
to news.
You know, it's the tried and true kind of strategy here, which is stay the course.
You can react on the margins to things, but try and update your
portfolio as little as possible.
That's finance professor Derek Horstmeyer.
And that's it for your money briefing.
This episode was produced by Ariana Asparu and Coleman Standifer with
supervising producer
Melanie Roy.
I'm Oyan Adedoyan for The Wall Street Journal.
Thanks for listening!