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# Why the Dollar Fell
The dollar index has recently experienced volatile downside movement, primarily due to the Fed's continued rate-cut expectations (100 basis points of cumulative cuts in 2026) weakening interest rate advantages, with capital flowing out of US assets toward the euro zone and emerging markets. Geopolitical conflicts initially supported the dollar as a safe haven, but trade frictions and fiscal deficit concerns subsequently pressured its performance.
# Why Gold Fell
Although gold is a traditional safe-haven asset, it dropped over 4% on March 3rd because the dollar's brief strength increased costs for non-US buyers, coupled with institutional investors taking profits and crowded long positions triggering technical selling. Conflict-driven inflation fears pushed US Treasury yields higher, further suppressing gold prices (trading at $4,838/oz on March 18th, down 3.2% for the month).
# Why US Stocks Fell
The three major US indices all declined on March 3rd: the Dow fell 0.83% (-403 points), the S&P 500 fell 0.94%, and the Nasdaq fell 1.02%, with intraday losses expanding beyond 2.5%. AI bubble concerns, unemployment rising to a 4-year high (approaching 5% triggering recession fears), and tech stock capital expenditure pressures (such as Amazon), combined with geopolitical war risks, triggered widespread selling.
# Why Cryptocurrencies Fell
Total crypto market cap fell over 1%, with Bitcoin dropping to approximately $67,408 and Ethereum near $1,967, affected by stock market correlation and ETF fund outflows (XRP ETF saw $22 million in outflows over two days). Trump's tariff policy, leverage liquidations (exceeding $3.2 billion in a single day), and technical breakdown (Bitcoin falling below its 365-day moving average) amplified the decline, down 48% from 2025 highs.
# Why Oil Fell
Oil should have risen due to Middle East conflict (WTI reaching $76 and Brent exceeding $81 in early March), but OPEC+ (led by Saudi Arabia and Russia) announced on March 1st an increase of 206,000 barrels per day starting in April, with oversupply expectations suppressing gains and turning to losses. Weak global demand and Russian-Ukrainian peace hopes diminished geopolitical premium, causing Brent to break below the $60 mark and continue declining.
# Market Correlation Mechanism
These assets' rare simultaneous decline stems from "risk aversion": investors sold high-risk assets (US stocks, crypto) for cash, tightening liquidity; gold and oil were affected by reversed dollar volatility and supply factors. In the short term, Fed meetings and Middle East developments will determine rebounds or continued declines; long-term direction hinges on economic recession risk.