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The greenback is back

The US dollar's recent rise is more than a short-term blip, with positive economic factors pointing to a sustained strengthening of the currency

Reading Time:3 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
David Brown

A recent reversal of fortunes for the US dollar has been built on the back of revolution in Ukraine and a rethink on emerging markets in the face of an uncertain outlook for global economic growth that has temporarily driven investors towards safe havens.

At least that is what dollar bears would have you believe - especially those still betting on further falls for the greenback after a decade of steep and steady decline.

The real risk for investors holding short dollar positions is that a temporary wave of risk aversion turns instead into a secular recovery - one driven not by supposedly unstoppable market forces, but by the real power brokers in currency markets: central banks.

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Forget safe-haven fillips, fundamental forces are working in the dollar's favour and the up-wave is decisively engaged.

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Since the advent of floating exchange rates in 1973, the dollar has moved in long-term cycles. Periods of cyclical rallies would be followed by periods of cyclical declines - some shorter than others, some longer.

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