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An Anchor of Global Asset Pricing, a key benchmark for reading USD strength
The US Dollar Index (DXY) measures the dollar’s strength against a basket of major currencies. It is a barometer of global capital flows and a key pricing benchmark for gold, crude oil, non-USD currencies and many global assets—providing a core basis for analysing macro trends and market sentiment.
- An Anchor of Global Asset Pricing
- A Core Market-Sentiment Indicator
- Broadly linked with gold, commodities and more
- 23-hour volatility
Trading Summary
Product Attributes
Reference MarketTradable?
Not TradableUse Case
Helps judge the direction of precious metalsCore Focus
US Dollar strength / Rate expectations / Macro dataPage Function
View quotes, charts and linkage logicNote
For reference only. Not investment advice.Key Factors Affecting
Federal Reserve Rate Policy
Changes in rate expectations are one of the core drivers of the US dollar's direction.
US Macro Data
Non-Farm Payrolls, CPI, PCE and GDP data directly affect expectations for the US dollar.
US Treasury Yields
Yield movements affect global capital preference for US-dollar assets.
Safe-Haven Capital Flows
When global risk events intensify, the US dollar often gains safe-haven appeal.
Key Market Signals to Watch
FOMC Rate Decision
One of the most important event drivers for the US Dollar Index.
Non-Farm Payrolls and CPI
Employment and inflation data directly affect the US dollar trend.
US Treasury Yields
Can help assess the medium-term direction and strength of the US dollar.
Gold and Silver Synchronous Performance
The US Dollar Index and precious metals usually show a clear linkage.
Why Keep Following

It is not a tradable product, but it is an important entry point for understanding gold and silver markets.

Many precious-metals moves are ultimately inseparable from changes in the US dollar's direction.



