Dollar Index Falls Below 98 for First Time Since 2022, Lifting Outlook for Crypto and Risk Assets
The U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) dropped below 98 on Wednesday, marking its lowest level in over three years and signaling a potential tailwind for risk assets — particularly cryptocurrencies like bitcoin (BTC).
The DXY, which tracks the dollar’s performance against a basket of major currencies, has long served as a barometer for global risk appetite. Levels above 100 typically reflect dollar strength and tighter global financial conditions — often pressuring equities and digital assets. A sub-98 reading suggests the opposite: loosening financial conditions and a shift toward risk-on positioning.
Macro Backdrop Favors Softening Dollar
The dollar’s decline comes amid a wave of dovish signals from U.S. macro data. Headline inflation for May printed at 2.4% year-over-year, slightly below the 2.5% consensus forecast. The miss reinforced expectations that the Federal Reserve may begin cutting rates as early as this month.
According to the CME FedWatch Tool, markets are now pricing in a 99.8% probability of a June rate cut, with the target federal funds rate expected to drop to 4.25%–4.50%.
Simultaneously, confidence in the greenback continues to erode as narratives around de-dollarization gain traction, driven in part by global shifts in trade and heightened policy uncertainty stemming from President Trump’s tariff-led economic agenda.
Implications for Crypto
A weakening dollar has historically served as a catalyst for bitcoin and other digital assets, which tend to outperform when global liquidity conditions improve. With rate cuts looming and the DXY losing ground, many analysts view this environment as increasingly supportive for crypto market upside.






















