What A Stronger Dollar Would Mean For Property Investors
Real estate investors do not need to own gold to care about the gold market. When bullion begins to lose momentum, it often says something larger about liquidity, currency strength, and the cost of capital. Those forces sit directly underneath property valuations.
In a recent Kitco News interview, commodities strategist Carley Garner of DeCarley Trading argued that gold’s support near $4,000 an ounce may not hold if the U.S. dollar strengthens and excess liquidity is withdrawn from the system. Her central point is simple: if policymakers successfully reverse the currency debasement trade, one of gold’s strongest tailwinds weakens.
For property investors, the relevant signal is not just gold’s potential move toward the $3,700 to $3,600 range. It is the broader shift Garner describes: speculative capital moving out of risk assets and back toward U.S. Treasuries and the dollar, where investors can still earn roughly 4% to 5% with far less volatility.
That matters because real estate pricing is highly sensitive to competing yields. When Treasury yields are attractive, investors demand better income from property. Cap rates tend to face upward pressure, especially in markets where rental growth is slowing or debt costs remain elevated. Assets bought on thin yields and aggressive rent assumptions become harder to justify.
For real estate, the dollar is not background noise. It is part of the pricing mechanism.
A stronger dollar also changes the cross-border investment equation. For foreign buyers, U.S. assets become more expensive in local currency terms. That can cool demand in gateway markets that rely on international capital. At the same time, dollar strength may benefit U.S. investors looking abroad, particularly where local currencies have weakened and real estate repricing is already underway.
There is another layer for developers. Garner noted that a stronger dollar could pressure commodities broadly, including metals such as silver and copper. If that plays out, some construction input costs may ease. But lower material prices do not automatically create a development boom. Financing costs, lender appetite, labour availability, insurance, and entitlement risk remain decisive. Cheaper copper does little good if the capital stack no longer works.
The more important issue is liquidity. Real estate performed exceptionally well during the years when capital was abundant, debt was cheap, and investors were rewarded for extending risk. If the market is entering a period where excess pandemic-era liquidity continues to drain, property investors should expect wider dispersion. Prime assets with durable income will remain financeable. Marginal assets will need price discovery.
This does not mean investors should retreat. It means underwriting has to become more disciplined. Stress-test exit cap rates. Compare projected cash-on-cash returns with Treasury yields. Revisit refinancing assumptions. Be cautious with deals that only work under rapid rent growth or near-perfect occupancy. In a stronger-dollar environment, patience can become a source of return.
The practical takeaway is clear: watch the dollar, real yields, and Treasury demand as closely as local comparable sales. If Garner is right, and capital continues rotating toward safety, the next real estate opportunity may not come from chasing growth. It may come from waiting for motivated sellers, cleaner pricing, and assets whose income can stand on its own.
Source: Kitco News


