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Scenario × Asset Analysis

What Happens to Trade-Weighted Dollar (Broad) When the Quits Rate Collapses?

What happens when the JOLTS quits rate collapses below 2.0%? Loss of worker confidence, wage growth deceleration, and recession risk implications.

Trade-Weighted Dollar (Broad)
118.86
as of Apr 10, 2026
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Trigger: JOLTS Quit Rate
1.90%
Condition: falls below 2.0%
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How Trade-Weighted Dollar (Broad) Responds

Dollar weakens as expected Fed path shifts dovish.

Scenario Background

The quits rate measures the percentage of the workforce voluntarily leaving jobs each month. It reflects worker confidence: people quit when they believe they can find better positions elsewhere. A quits rate above 2.5% historically signals a tight labor market with strong wage pressure, while a reading below 2.0% indicates workers are staying put, often out of caution about finding new employment.

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Historical Context

The quits rate peaked near 3.0% in late 2021 during the "Great Resignation" and normalized to roughly 2.1% by 2024. Pre-pandemic peaks were 2.4% in 2018-2019. Historical collapses include 2001 (2.4% to 1.7%), 2008-2009 (2.1% to 1.2%), and March 2020 (2.3% to 1.5%). In each case, wage growth decelerated within 2 to 4 quarters and unemployment rose.

What to Watch For

  • Quits rate falling below 1.9%
  • Layoffs rate rising above 1.2% simultaneously
  • Atlanta Fed Wage Tracker declining below 4%
  • Unemployment rate rising 0.3% over three months
  • Job-switcher wage premium narrowing below 2%

Other Assets When the Quits Rate Collapses

Other Scenarios Affecting Trade-Weighted Dollar (Broad)

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