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The Dollar And Oil Are Moving Together Like Never Before

Published May 14, 2026
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Summary:
  • The tie between the U.S. dollar and Brent crude is the most positive on record, going back to when the Bloomberg dollar gauge first launched in 2005.
  • The two used to move in opposite ways. For 11 weeks straight, they have been moving the same way.
  • The trigger: a closed Strait of Hormuz and what the IEA is calling the biggest oil supply shock ever.

For years, markets stuck to one simple rule. When oil went up, the dollar went down.

That rule just broke. Eleven weeks into the Iran crisis, the dollar and oil are climbing in the same direction, harder than they ever have.

What Just Got Broken

The tie between the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index and Brent crude futures is now the most positive on record. That data goes back to 2005, when the dollar gauge first launched.

The day-to-day match-up between the two is also the closest in more than twenty years.

This matters because the old logic was clean. Oil is priced in dollars.

So when oil rose, buyers needed more dollars. Money in the rest of the world tended to move the other way.

Now both move up at the same time. The tie has flipped, and the flip is the strongest one markets have ever seen.

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Why The Pattern Flipped

The Strait of Hormuz is the shipping lane off the coast of Iran. It usually carries about a fifth of the world's oil.

It is now closed. The IEA called it the biggest oil supply hit on record.

Brent crude briefly touched $126 a barrel during the crisis. That is a level not seen since the 2022 spike after Russia invaded Ukraine.

When the fear gets that big, investors stop trading the math. They buy oil to hedge the shortage, and they buy dollars to hedge the rest.

So both go up at the same time. The driver is not supply and demand.

It is one big risk showing up in two prices.

What This Means For Investors

A strong dollar plus pricey oil is a rough mix for smaller markets abroad. They have to pay for fuel in a costlier dollar, and the fuel itself costs more.

For U.S. investors, the hit shows up in two ways. Goods from abroad get pricier, and inflation pressure starts pushing back into the system.

The Fed has fewer easy moves when both forces hit at once. Cutting rates feeds inflation, while holding them slows growth.

What To Watch

The dollar and oil are pricing the same risk twice. That is the part that matters.

Past flips like this have unwound fast. Once supply fears ease, the link tends to snap back to its old shape.

So the strong-dollar, strong-oil mix is a fear trade, not a new normal. It can drag stocks and bonds with it while it lasts.

Energy stocks have been the easy winner this year. Big oil firms are up sharply, with some names hitting fresh highs in the past month.

The crisis ends when the strait reopens. The trade probably ends with it.

For more reads on what is actually driving the market, join 350,000+ investors who get Market Briefs - you also get a free 45-minute investing course as a sign-up bonus.

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