I’m pretty sure by now – everyone has fallen under the “Bernanke spell” and is more or less convinced that stocks will go up forever. As a currency trader this is really of no consequence to me “directly” although I’ve always maintained a measure of “risk” via the SP500 – in my week to week analysis. Looking at the index unto itself it would be hard to argue that “risk is off” as U.S equity prices “appear” to just keep going up and up and up.
Although If you removed the banks ( and their reported profits in the 2nd quarter – thanks to the “Bernank”) you’d be left with an entirely different picture. Heavy weights like Apple, IBM and CAT all down, down ,and down some more.
The SP500 is now about as far stretched above its mean price ( the 200 Moving Average ) as it’s ever been in the history of the index and has taken on the characteristics of a large, thin membrane , floating translucent object. You’ve got it – a bubble.
Gold on the other hand is also stretched about as far from the mean as it’s been in a very long time, and has recently shown evidence of bottoming. As we’ve discussed earlier – since the massive liquidity injections / stimulus provided by both The Fed as well The Bank of Japan there really hasn’t been a “need” to own gold, as investors have had little need to seek safety.
TIming trades on these longer time frames is difficult for the newcomer, as well not exactly what one considers “exciting trade action” but it’s important to get a lay of the land before stepping out on the field. With “all things” as stretched as they are – the elastic band will always ALWAYS snap back. It’s important to weigh the odds of “risk vs reward” – and even more important when things are pushed to these extremes.
Could the U.S stock market continue to climb forever? as Canada’s market still can’t break higher? As Japan has just put in a “lower high”? As EU Zone continues to struggle? As the U.S dollar continues to grind lower?
I suppose anything is possible, but generally speaking – non of this exists in vacuum. I assume that Gold and the precious metals in general “should” take a large part of the “safety trade” when we do finally see the turn.
Will it be next week?
The Currency Reality Behind Market Extremes
Dollar Weakness Creates the Perfect Storm
The grinding dollar weakness I mentioned isn’t happening in isolation – it’s the direct result of Bernanke’s monetary madness, and it’s creating massive distortions across currency pairs that smart traders need to recognize. When the Federal Reserve keeps rates at zero and continues quantitative easing, the dollar becomes the funding currency of choice for carry trades worldwide. This pushes USD lower against practically everything, but more importantly, it creates artificial strength in risk assets that simply cannot be sustained.
Look at EUR/USD – we’re seeing the euro gain ground despite the eurozone’s fundamental problems simply because traders are fleeing dollar weakness. The same story plays out in AUD/USD, where Australian dollar strength has little to do with Australia’s economic fundamentals and everything to do with Fed policy. These currency moves are telling us that the market is chasing yield and risk wherever it can find it, regardless of underlying value. That’s bubble behavior, plain and simple.
The JPY Factor Nobody’s Talking About
Here’s what gets really interesting – Japan’s aggressive monetary policy under Kuroda is creating a secondary wave of liquidity that’s amplifying these distortions. USD/JPY has been on a tear, but notice how this strength in the dollar against yen contradicts the broader dollar weakness theme? This isn’t sustainable. When the Bank of Japan’s policies inevitably hit diminishing returns, we’re going to see JPY strength that catches everyone off guard.
The yen carry trade has become so crowded that any hint of risk-off sentiment will create a massive unwinding. Remember, when leverage unwinds, it unwinds fast and violently. GBP/JPY, AUD/JPY, EUR/JPY – all these crosses are sitting ducks for a major reversal when the music stops. The Japanese market putting in that lower high I mentioned? That’s your early warning signal that domestic investors aren’t buying what their central bank is selling.
Gold’s Currency Implications
Gold’s recent bottoming action isn’t just about precious metals – it’s a currency story through and through. When gold starts moving higher, it’s typically signaling that faith in fiat currencies is cracking. The relationship between gold and the dollar has been inverse for good reason: gold is the anti-dollar trade par excellence. But here’s the kicker – gold’s bottoming while other currencies are still riding the anti-dollar wave suggests that smart money is already positioning for the next phase.
Watch the gold-to-euro ratio, the gold-to-yen ratio, and especially the gold-to-Australian dollar ratio. When gold starts outperforming these “strong” currencies, you’ll know that the broader currency debasement trade is coming to an end. Central banks can print money, but they can’t print confidence forever. Gold’s technical bottoming pattern coinciding with these extreme currency distortions isn’t coincidence – it’s preparation.
The Timing Game and Risk Management
The challenge with these macro themes is that central bank intervention can extend trends far beyond what seems rational. The Bank of England proved this, the ECB has proven this, and now the Fed and BOJ are proving it again. But intervention doesn’t eliminate cycles – it amplifies them. The longer these distortions persist, the more violent the eventual correction becomes.
For currency traders, this means positioning for the turn while respecting the existing trend. Short-term, the dollar weakness and risk-on themes might continue. Medium-term, we’re setting up for massive reversals across all major pairs. The key is managing position size and timeframes appropriately. Don’t fight the Fed with your entire account, but don’t ignore the setup either.
Risk management becomes critical when markets are this extended. Use smaller position sizes, wider stops, and focus on longer-term timeframes where these macro themes will play out. The elastic band will snap back – the only question is when and how violently. Position accordingly, because when this reversal comes, it’s going to reshape the entire currency landscape practically overnight.




