Video Briefing

Offshore Citizen: Dollar Milkshake Theory

Sep 14, 2022Video Briefing13:48Watch on YouTube

The Dollar Milkshake Theory argues that global liquidity will increasingly be drawn into the United States, strengthening the U.S. dollar far beyond what traditional macro‑economic expectations would suggest.

Core premise

  • When other countries devalue their currencies faster than the U.S., they tend to “dollarize”—shifting assets and debt into dollars.
  • The dollar is viewed as a flight‑to‑safety asset; as crises emerge elsewhere, capital flows toward the U.S. and its financial markets.
  • Because U.S. interest rates are higher than those of many other major currencies (e.g., the euro), investors have an incentive to hold dollars rather than alternatives.

Evidence of dollar strength

  • The U.S. Dollar Index (DXY), which measures the dollar against a basket of currencies, has outperformed most peers over the past decade.
  • Exceptions include the Swiss franc, which has also performed well, and the rupee, whose recent gains are considered artificial due to exchange‑rate controls.
  • Some analysts linked to the theory have speculated the DXY could eventually reach 150, though current levels are still far from that target.

Mechanisms that feed the “milkshake”

  1. Dollar‑denominated loans: Many emerging‑market borrowers (e.g., Turkish real‑estate purchases) issue debt in dollars because local currencies are seen as volatile. This creates a global exposure to U.S. monetary policy.
  2. Currency pegs: Middle‑Eastern currencies such as the UAE dirham are pegged to the dollar, effectively reinforcing dollar demand.
  3. Crypto stablecoins: A large share of crypto liquidity is held in U.S. dollar‑backed stablecoins, adding another source of dollar inflow.
  4. Asset purchases: International investors buying U.S. real estate and equities increase demand for dollars.

Potential downside: a sovereign‑currency collapse

  • The theory warns that if worldwide dollar‑denominated debt becomes unsustainable—i.e., borrowers can no longer service their obligations—the resulting strain could trigger a sharp correction in the dollar’s value.
  • This scenario would require a massive, simultaneous inability to meet debt payments across multiple economies.

Countervailing forces (reflexivity)

  • Price elasticity: As the dollar strengthens, U.S.‑priced goods become more expensive abroad, reducing foreign demand for American products and, consequently, for dollars. Simultaneously, U.S. consumers find foreign goods cheaper, further dampening dollar demand.
  • Historical interventions: In the early 1980s, coordinated actions among major economies deliberately weakened the dollar after it appreciated excessively, causing the DXY to retreat from its peak. A similar coordinated response could occur today.
  • Policy flexibility: Central banks and governments retain the ability to “kick the can down the road” through stimulus measures, bailouts, or targeted purchases of foreign‑currency debt (e.g., buying euro bonds).

Outlook

  • The dollar is likely to remain relatively attractive compared with many alternatives in the near term, given the lack of comparable safe‑haven assets with comparable depth and liquidity.
  • However, the extreme scenario of a rapid, uncontrolled dollar surge leading to a sovereign‑currency collapse is mitigated by market reflexivity, price adjustments, and potential policy coordination.
  • The timeline for any major shift is uncertain; it could take decades for systemic pressures to force a decisive weakening of the dollar, if it occurs at all.

Key take‑aways for investors

  • Monitor the DXY and the spread between U.S. and foreign interest rates as leading indicators of dollar flow.
  • Be aware of exposure to dollar‑denominated debt in emerging markets; rising servicing costs could signal growing risk.
  • Consider the reflexivity effect: strong dollar periods tend to self‑correct through trade‑balance adjustments and policy actions.