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Correlation Deep Dive

WTI Oil vs US Dollar: Correlation Analysis

Pearson correlation of daily returns for WTI Crude Oil and Trade-Weighted Dollar (Broad). Rolling windows, yearly breakdown, regression beta, and divergence analysis. Data window spans to (1,238 aligned observations).

30-Day
+0.550
Moderate positive
90-Day
+0.424
Moderate positive
1-Year
+0.311
Weak positive
5-Year
-0.055
Essentially uncorrelated

What the Number Means

The 0.42 correlation indicates that WTI Crude Oil and Trade-Weighted Dollar (Broad) have a moderate tendency to move together. The relationship is real but noisy, with frequent days where they disagree. Regime context matters: the correlation often strengthens during stress and weakens during calm periods.

Recent vs Long-Run Behavior

Last 90 Days
+0.424
5-Year Baseline
-0.055

A regime flip is underway. WTI Crude Oil and Trade-Weighted Dollar (Broad) have historically moved inversely (-0.06), but over the past 90 days they have been moving together (0.42). When a long-running negative correlation turns positive, it usually signals a shared stress factor overwhelming the normal relationship. Watch for forced deleveraging or a dominant macro theme reasserting.

Statistical Details (1-Year Window)

Pearson Correlation (r)+0.311
R-Squared (r²)0.097
Beta (WTI Crude Oil vs Trade-Weighted Dollar (Broad))3.367
Daily Volatility σ(WTI Crude Oil)3.03%
Daily Volatility σ(Trade-Weighted Dollar (Broad))0.28%
Observations252

Correlation measures directional co-movement; R² quantifies the fraction of variance explained by the linear relationship. Beta is the slope coefficient from regressing WTI Crude Oil returns on Trade-Weighted Dollar (Broad) returns. A beta above 1 means the first asset amplifies moves of the second.

Year-by-Year Correlation

YearCorrelationStrengthObservations
2026+0.436Moderate positive77
2025+0.183Essentially uncorrelated249
2024-0.093Essentially uncorrelated250
2023-0.147Essentially uncorrelated248
2022-0.225Weak negative249
2021-0.285Weak negative165

Year-by-year correlation reveals how the relationship has held up across different macro regimes. Sharp year-over-year swings in correlation often mark the transition between stress and calm periods.

Rolling 90-Day Extremes

Most Correlated Period
+0.432
ending 2026-04-03
Most Decoupled Period
-0.491
ending 2021-11-10

Extremes in rolling 90-day correlation often coincide with regime changes, forced deleveraging, or the arrival of a dominant new macro theme that overwhelms normal relationships.

Methodology

Correlations are computed on daily log-adjacent returns for WTI Crude Oil and Trade-Weighted Dollar (Broad), aligned on shared trading dates. We use the Pearson product-moment coefficient, which measures the linear relationship between two return series.

Windows are the most recent N observations for 30D, 90D, and 1Y (252 trading days); the 5Y figure uses all aligned data up to 1,260 observations. Beta is the OLS slope from regressing the first series on the second. Data updates daily with a 24-hour revalidation cadence.

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Get daily macro analysis on shifting correlations, regime transitions, and cross-asset signals.

Correlation is not causation and backward-looking statistics can fail when regimes shift. Positions sized on historical correlation assumptions should be stress-tested against scenarios where the relationship breaks. For informational purposes only.