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Just For You
Dollar at a 3-Year Low: 3 Exporters Quietly Printing MoneyAuthored by Chris Markoch. Date Posted: 5/9/2026. 
Key Points
- A weaker U.S. dollar is creating pricing advantages for exporters like Caterpillar and Deere.
- Nucor benefits as falling dollar strength makes imported steel less competitive in the U.S. market.
- Infrastructure spending, reshoring, and data center construction add long-term growth catalysts beyond currency trends.
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The U.S. dollar index (DXY) is down about 10% since it reached $109.64 in early January 2025. As of May 6, the greenback is trading at a level investors haven’t seen since 2022. That raises two important questions: Why is it happening, and how can investors profit from the move? The first question is simple, but nuanced. Still, understanding the why makes the question of how to profit much easier to answer. Why Is the Dollar Falling?
A key reason for the dollar’s decline is the Trump administration’s focus on restructuring the global trade system. The idea is that the U.S. dollar has been overvalued for decades, leading to chronic trade deficits and the erosion of U.S. manufacturing to countries like China. Supporting that view, the U.S. goods trade deficit hit a record $1.2 trillion in 2024. That was 175% larger than in 2000. That’s a structural reason for the dollar’s slide. But there are other factors, too. First, the Federal Reserve began lowering interest rates at the end of 2024. This reduced the attractiveness of U.S. debt. Second, resilient global growth has dampened demand for dollar assets as a safe haven. Here’s how that works: foreign central banks and institutional investors have been selling U.S. Treasury bonds, which are dollar-denominated assets, to raise capital for their own markets. When foreign holders sell Treasuries, they receive dollars. When those dollars are converted back into local currencies for investment, it puts downward pressure on the dollar and upward pressure on the foreign currency. Analysts anticipate the next few years could bring a secular bear market for the dollar, driven by investors diversifying away from dollar-denominated securities and by central banks reducing their Treasury holdings. Let These 2 Blue-Chip Stocks Do the Heavy LiftingOne area investors may want to consider is heavy machinery and industrials. Both markets are getting a lift in the United States from the onshoring of manufacturing, the data center buildout, and the need to rebuild national infrastructure. The United States also exports more than $57 billion in machinery each year. Companies in this space are already seeing the benefits. Take Caterpillar Inc. (NYSE: CAT), for example. Nearly half of the company’s revenue comes from outside North America. That makes the benefit of a weaker dollar self-explanatory. Pricing equipment in a customer’s local currency becomes meaningfully cheaper without Caterpillar having to sacrifice margins. And as the company’s Q1 2026 earnings report made clear, the long-term bull case is also rooted in the United States. Caterpillar is seeing strong demand for its heavy equipment to build out data centers and modernize the nation’s infrastructure. Deere & Company (NYSE: DE) is in a similar position. The company generates about 40% of its revenue outside the United States. It has a particularly strong presence in Latin America, which accounts for more than $5.5 billion in annual sales. The dollar tailwind is also helping Deere navigate a cyclical downturn that began in its 2024 fiscal year. DE has already absorbed much of that bad news, and the company is likely to see additional benefits as precision agriculture technology—Deere’s biggest long-term bet—continues to attract buyers regardless of where the dollar trades. This Steel Stock Stands OutNucor Corporation (NYSE: NUE) tells a different but complementary story. As the largest steel producer in the United States, Nucor doesn't generate the overseas revenue that Caterpillar and Deere do. Its advantage from a weaker dollar is more indirect. Steel is a globally traded commodity priced in dollars. When the dollar falls, U.S.-produced steel becomes cheaper for foreign buyers and more competitive against imports in the domestic market. Foreign steel arriving in American ports, often from lower-cost producers in Asia and Europe, becomes relatively more expensive in dollar terms. That gives Nucor a pricing cushion that doesn't require it to cut costs or chase volume. What makes Nucor particularly attractive here is its efficiency story. The company uses electric arc furnaces powered by recycled scrap steel—a process that is far cheaper and more flexible than the traditional blast furnace model used by most global competitors. The longer-term demand picture is also building quietly. Data centers require enormous amounts of structural steel. So does grid expansion, bridge replacement, and the kind of industrial reshoring the current administration is actively trying to accelerate. Nucor is already one of the primary domestic suppliers of rebar—the reinforcing steel that goes into essentially every large construction project in America. Could the Dollar Reverse Course?There’s a view among some economists that the flight away from U.S. Treasuries will eventually create demand for the dollar. For example, according to J.P. Morgan, each 1-percentage-point decline in foreign holdings relative to GDP, which equates to roughly $300 billion in Treasuries, would push yields higher by more than 33 basis points. That means if and when these same countries need to rebuild dollar reserves or re-enter U.S. assets, the buying pressure could be significant. If that’s the case, the currency tailwind for these stocks could reverse. However, each name has a bull case beyond the dollar that makes them attractive long-term portfolio holdings. |
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