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Scenario × Asset Analysis

What Happens to Trade-Weighted Dollar (Broad) When Fed Funds Rate Exceeds 6%?

What happens when the Fed funds rate exceeds 6%? Financial stress, economic slowdown risk, and historical precedents from restrictive policy.

Trade-Weighted Dollar (Broad)
118.86
as of Apr 10, 2026
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Trigger: Federal Funds Rate
3.64%
Condition: exceeds 6%
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How Trade-Weighted Dollar (Broad) Responds

Dollar strengthens initially on yield differential but weakens sharply once Fed pivots.

Scenario Background

A Fed funds rate above 6% represents deeply restrictive monetary policy in the modern era. With neutral rates estimated at 2.5-3.0% (nominal), a rate of 6%+ means policy is roughly 300+ bps above neutral, which is designed to meaningfully slow aggregate demand, credit growth, and inflation.

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Historical Context

Fed funds exceeded 6% multiple times in the modern era: 1979-1982 (Volcker, peak 20%), 1989 (peak 9.75%), 2000 (peak 6.50%), and 2006-2007 (peak 5.25%, technically just below 6%). The 2022-2024 cycle peaked at 5.50% without crossing 6%. Prior to 1980, 6%+ rates were more common but also more typical of elevated inflation environments. Every 6%+ Fed cycle since WWII has been followed by recession within 18 months.

What to Watch For

  • Bank reserves declining rapidly
  • Money market funds drawing from repo
  • Regional bank stress (deposit outflows, securities losses)
  • Corporate bankruptcy filings accelerating
  • Commercial real estate refinancing stress intensifying

Other Assets When Fed Funds Rate Exceeds 6%

Other Scenarios Affecting Trade-Weighted Dollar (Broad)

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