After a month and a half of drifting, the US dollar has finally made a defining bullish break. However, whereas the long period of congestion would develop against notable fundamental winds (steps from China to cool its markets, a deterioration of EU stability and the first tangible traces of dollar-based interest speculation), the return to 2010’s dominant trend seemed to lack drive. Certainly, conditions have improved for the greenback over time. The relative growth and yield forecasts for the United States and its benchmark currency have developed a notable investment appeal to compliment the unit’s safe haven status. However, why would the market make its move now without a tangible catalyst to set things in motion?