QE5 – The Puppet Show Continues

Come Wednesday markets get another chance to hear from Mr. Bernanke at the press conference following the June FOMC meeting.

It pains me deeply to consider how many individuals will be hanging on every word, with hopes of  reaching their financial / trading / investing goals – all wrapped up in a single man’s remarks.  It’s sad really. It’s almost as though the idea of markets actually trading based on the performance of the companies therein – has been completely and totally forgotten. I would even go as far as to suggest there are an entirely new group of “youthful traders” out there that may not know any different! All “fully invested” only on the premise that “Ben’s gonna watch their backs”. Oh my……

What also kills me is the suggestion that this recent “dip” has been manufactured in the media / by the Fed in an attempt to “gauge” the general investors community reaction to the idea of “less stimulus” – talk about a puppet show!

It really is a puppet show! Pull the strings up….see what happens..let the strings down….see what happens. Sick.

I’ll stick with the general “forecast” that with markets still practially at all time highs – there will be no further mention of stimulus on Wednesday..but likely comments suggesting ” we are ready when needed”. How the markets take it at this point  – again….perhaps that “final pop” bringing in the last of the retails before giving things a good flush.

I’m gonna play a bounce in USD, but keep things on a tight leash as I remain medium term about as bearish as a gorilla can be. Any strength in over all “risk appetite” in coming days can only be seen as even better areas to continue selling.

The Central Bank Puppet Masters: Trading Reality in a Manipulated Market

Dollar Strength: Playing the Inevitable Squeeze

The USD positioning right now is absolutely critical, and most traders are missing the bigger picture entirely. While everyone’s focused on Bernanke’s every syllable, the real money is positioning for what happens after this circus act ends. The Dollar Index has been coiling like a spring, and when this artificial stimulus prop gets pulled – even partially – we’re looking at a massive short squeeze that’ll leave carry trade junkies bleeding out their ears.

EUR/USD specifically is sitting pretty for a beautiful breakdown. All this European Central Bank dovishness combined with Fed tapering talk? That’s a recipe for parity conversations within the next 12-18 months. The euro bulls betting on European recovery are about to learn a harsh lesson about what happens when your central bank is printing euros faster than toilet paper while the Fed even whispers about tightening.

GBP/USD isn’t much better. The Bank of England’s been playing catch-up with stimulus measures, and Sterling strength is purely technical at this point. Any real risk-off move and Cable’s heading back toward 1.45 faster than you can say “quantitative easing.” Smart money’s already positioning short on any bounce above 1.58.

The Commodity Currency Massacre Coming

Here’s where things get really ugly, and where the real opportunities lie for those paying attention. AUD/USD, NZD/USD, and CAD – these commodity-linked currencies are about to get absolutely demolished when this whole stimulus house of cards starts wobbling. Australia’s been riding the China growth story and iron ore demand, but what happens when Chinese credit markets finally get their reality check?

The Australian Dollar’s been artificially propped up by yield differentials and risk appetite that’s completely disconnected from economic fundamentals. When risk-off finally hits – and it will hit hard – AUD/USD is looking at a straight shot toward 0.85. The Reserve Bank of Australia knows this too, which is why they’ve been gradually shifting their tone despite all the happy talk about mining booms.

New Zealand’s even more vulnerable. Their central bank’s been playing the inflation targeting game while their housing market looks like a carbon copy of 2006 Florida. NZD/USD above 0.75 is a joke, and when global risk appetite finally gets its head out of the clouds, Kiwi’s heading for a 15% haircut minimum.

The Yen Carry Trade Unwind Nobody Sees Coming

USD/JPY is the most dangerous trade on the board right now, and I’m amazed at how many traders are still betting on yen weakness like it’s 2012. Sure, Abenomics and Bank of Japan printing created this beautiful trend higher, but we’re approaching levels where reality starts mattering again. Every pip above 100 is borrowed time, especially when global risk sentiment finally shifts.

The yen carry trade has been the fuel behind this entire equity rally, and it’s created the most massive, leveraged, interconnected mess of positioning we’ve seen since before 2008. When this unwinds – and Wednesday’s Bernanke comments could easily be the catalyst – USD/JPY doesn’t just fall, it collapses. We’re talking about a potential 1000+ pip move in weeks, not months.

Japanese exporters have been hedging like crazy above 95, and there’s a technical and fundamental wall building around 102-103 that most retail traders are completely ignoring. The smart money’s been quietly accumulating yen positions for weeks.

Trading the Manipulation: Position Sizing and Risk Management

In this completely artificial, central bank-dominated environment, position sizing becomes everything. Traditional technical analysis only works until the puppet masters decide to cut the strings. That’s why I’m keeping stops tight and position sizes smaller than normal – even when I’m convinced about direction.

The volatility spikes coming are going to be legendary. We’re talking about 200+ pip daily ranges becoming normal again across major pairs. Most retail accounts won’t survive it because they’re positioned for the continuation of this low-volatility, central bank-supported fantasy land.

Risk management isn’t just about stop losses anymore – it’s about recognizing that fundamental analysis matters again when the stimulus music finally stops. The gorilla’s staying nimble, keeping powder dry, and ready to capitalize when this whole facade finally crumbles.

Carry Trade And Aussie – Explained

You’re learning about currencies….you’re seeing the impact in markets – you’re having some fun. Who knows? Perhaps a few of you are even getting in there and placing a trade or two – good for you.

An important distinction to make when trading currencies, is to understand what “role” they play in the global economy “aside” from their normal function as a “token of value” in the given country of origin.

We all use money – yes…..but big banks use money in entirely different ways. Ways that can affect global markets regardless of “who” or “where”. I’ve mentioned the Carry Trade many, many times and encouraged you to read up  – as it is the most basic and simple example of how banks use “your savings” behind the computers and digital printouts – in order to generate massive profits. You don’t honestly think the money is just sitting there in a vault do you?

Banks ( as well Kong) utilize cash on hand to fund ventures via many foreign exchange strategies in order to turn profit. You are happy to see the printout on your stub when you check the balance – while your actual money is likely being put to work….far, far away in some foreign land.

Simply put – If I can walk in a bank in Japan and borrow money at next to “zero” % interest – then take that money and invest it in Australia where even the base savings account rate is 2.75% – boom – Carry Trade on.

So….the Aussie. The Australian economy has flourished over past years and in turn has been able to offer a considerably higher rate of return on savings than many other countries. So in times of “risk on” money flows to the Aussie like the Ganges River! As big banks ( and Kong) borrow low yielding currencies ( JPY and USD ) and purchase those that offer better returns. Simple as that.

Unfortunately we’ve got a problem here though. Australia is currently in its own “easing period” and has plans to further lower its interest rates ( as Japan as well the U.S has ) in order to keep the economy moving. This puts pressure on Carry traders with the knowledge that the Aussie will continue to “cramp this trade” as it continues to lower its rates….closing the gab between 0% and 2.75% ( not long ago it was 4.50%!) smaller and smaller as the Carry Trade starts to lose its appeal (viability).

This is of incredible significance on a global scale ( and another contributing factor in my longer term view ) as to provide further pressure on an already fragile global banking system. When big banks (and Kong) have one of their largest revenue streams / cash cows producing smaller and smaller returns, in a global environment that is clearly slowing – all the money printing in the world can’t make that one go away.

The Australian Dollar has taken a huge hit already, and as much as I had originally been looking for a solid bounce before getting short ( which I am still going to do ) I am confident that what this really suggests is that the big money has already been backing out in preparation for much further losses to follow. Nothing short term will change my mind about this…as I do look for higher levels in AUD – to sell, sell , sell , sell , sell.

The Cascading Effects of Australia’s Rate Cut Cycle

Resource Curse Amplifies Currency Weakness

Here’s what most retail traders miss about the Aussie’s decline – it’s not just about interest rates. Australia’s economy is fundamentally tied to commodity exports, particularly iron ore and coal shipments to China. When global growth slows, commodity demand crashes first, and the AUD gets hit with a double whammy. You’ve got falling interest rates killing the carry trade appeal, while simultaneously watching Australia’s primary export revenues evaporate. This creates a feedback loop that accelerates currency weakness far beyond what simple rate differentials would suggest. Smart money recognizes this structural vulnerability, which is why institutional flows have been aggressively short AUD against both USD and JPY for months.

The Yen’s New Role as King of Funding Currencies

With Australia’s rates heading toward zero, the Japanese Yen is reclaiming its throne as the ultimate funding currency. The Bank of Japan’s commitment to negative rates and unlimited quantitative easing makes JPY the cheapest money on the planet. But here’s the kicker – as global risk appetite deteriorates, those massive carry trade positions get unwound in violent fashion. We saw this movie in 2008, and we’re seeing the preview now. When traders scramble to pay back their JPY loans, they create explosive short-covering rallies in the Yen that can move 500-1000 pips in days. The AUDJPY pair becomes particularly brutal during these unwinds, as it represents the perfect storm of a weakening high-yielder against a strengthening funding currency.

Central Bank Coordination Creates False Markets

Don’t think for a second that central banks aren’t coordinating behind closed doors. When Australia cuts rates while the Fed hints at pauses, when the ECB maintains negative rates while the BOJ promises eternal easing – this isn’t coincidence. It’s managed devaluation on a global scale. Each central bank is desperately trying to weaken their currency to boost exports and inflate away debt burdens. The problem? They can’t all succeed simultaneously. Someone’s currency has to strengthen relative to the others, and that mathematical impossibility creates the volatility we profit from. The smart play is identifying which central bank blinks first when their currency strengthens too much, too fast.

Why the USD Remains the Ultimate Safe Haven

Despite all the money printing, despite the political chaos, despite the mounting debt – the US Dollar continues to strengthen when global markets panic. Why? Because when the global banking system faces stress, dollars become scarce. All those international loans denominated in USD, all those carry trades funded in other currencies but invested in dollar assets, all those foreign banks with dollar funding needs – they create an insatiable demand for greenbacks during crisis periods. The Dollar Index has been quietly building a base above 100, and when the next wave of carry trade unwinds hits, you’ll see why the USD earned its reputation as the world’s reserve currency. Every other central bank can print their local currency, but only the Federal Reserve can print dollars.

The bottom line? Australia’s rate cutting cycle isn’t just about domestic monetary policy – it’s another domino falling in the global race to the bottom. As traditional carry trades lose their appeal, banks and institutional investors are forced into increasingly risky strategies to generate returns. This creates instability, volatility, and ultimately opportunity for those who understand the underlying mechanics. The Australian Dollar’s decline is far from over, and the ripple effects through commodity currencies, emerging markets, and funding currencies are just beginning. Position accordingly, because this trend has months, if not years, left to run.

Stunned At The Bullishness – Risk Off

I am absolutely stunned!

I’ve been on and on about this for literally months now….watching TLT seeing the trouble ahead with bonds, and in turn the USD  – as equities are ALWAYS the last to go!

https://forexkong.com/2013/04/20/intermarket-analysis-questions-answered/

This should have served as a roadmap for your preparation – and at this point there really are no excuses.

This market has absolutely tonnes of room for correction. I can see several JPY pairs easily shaving -1000 pips and still maintaining there trends, and USD has got nothing but “air” underneath it here all the way down to like… 79.00

In any case – I don’t suggest taking this lightly as my “short U.S equities” has also been triggered.

Good luck all.

3% more overnight alone on Long JPY trades that equate to one thing…and one thing only.

RISK OFF.

The Risk-Off Tsunami: Why This Market Correction Has Just Begun

Bond Market Breakdown Sets the Stage for Currency Carnage

The TLT collapse I’ve been hammering about isn’t just some academic exercise – it’s the canary in the coal mine that’s now gasping for air. When the 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF starts hemorrhaging value, you’re witnessing the unwinding of the greatest bond bull market in modern history. Rising yields don’t just hurt bond holders; they absolutely demolish carry trades and send leveraged money running for the exits. The Federal Reserve’s easy money party is over, and the hangover is going to be brutal for anyone still holding risk assets denominated in anything other than safe-haven currencies.

What we’re seeing now is the classic intermarket domino effect playing out in real time. Bonds led the charge lower, the dollar followed suit as foreign capital fled U.S. markets, and now equities are finally catching up to reality. This isn’t a minor correction – this is a structural shift that’s going to reshape currency relationships for months, possibly years to come. The smart money saw this coming and positioned accordingly. Everyone else is about to learn a very expensive lesson about ignoring intermarket signals.

JPY Strength: The Ultimate Risk-Off Play Unleashed

The Japanese Yen’s explosive move higher isn’t surprising if you’ve been paying attention to the fundamentals. When global uncertainty spikes, the JPY becomes the ultimate safe-haven currency, and we’re seeing that dynamic play out with devastating efficiency. USD/JPY, EUR/JPY, and GBP/JPY are all prime candidates for massive reversals, and I’m talking about moves that will leave traders who ignored the warning signs absolutely crushed.

The carry trade unwind is particularly vicious because it’s self-reinforcing. As JPY strengthens, leveraged positions get margin calls, forcing more unwinding, which drives JPY even higher. This feedback loop can persist for weeks or even months once it gets momentum. The fact that we’re seeing 3% overnight moves tells you everything you need to know about the magnitude of positioning that’s being unwound. This isn’t retail traders taking profits – this is institutional money scrambling for the exits.

Dollar Destruction: No Floor Until Double Bottom Territory

The U.S. Dollar Index sitting on nothing but air down to those 79.00 levels isn’t hyperbole – it’s cold, hard technical reality. The dollar’s strength over the past cycle was built on interest rate differentials and relative economic outperformance. Both of those pillars are crumbling simultaneously. Foreign central banks are raising rates while the Fed is trapped by their own dovish rhetoric, and the U.S. economy is showing clear signs of rolling over just as other regions find their footing.

Dollar weakness creates a particularly toxic environment for U.S. assets because it amplifies the pain for foreign investors. A European investor watching the S&P 500 drop 5% while the dollar falls another 3% is looking at an 8% loss in euro terms. That’s the kind of math that triggers wholesale liquidation of U.S. positions. We’re not just talking about a currency correction here – we’re talking about a fundamental repricing of dollar-denominated assets across the board.

Equity Collapse: The Final Act in This Risk-Off Drama

My short equities signal wasn’t some contrarian bet – it was the logical conclusion of everything the bond and currency markets have been screaming for months. Equities are always the last asset class to acknowledge reality because they’re driven by emotion and momentum rather than cold mathematical relationships. But when the equity bubble finally pops, it does so with the force of all that pent-up denial being released at once.

The correlation between currency strength and equity performance is about to become painfully obvious to anyone who’s been ignoring it. Strong JPY historically coincides with weak global risk assets, and strong USD has been the foundation of the everything bubble we’ve been living through. Now that both of those relationships are reversing simultaneously, we’re looking at a perfect storm that’s going to make the 2008 crisis look like a minor correction.

This market has been begging for a reality check, and it’s finally getting one. The only question now is whether you positioned yourself correctly or whether you’re going to be another casualty of willful blindness to obvious intermarket signals.

Risk Currencies Not Participating

In the usual “risk on environment” the commodity related currencies are usually the big winners.

When investors feel that things are generally “safe” money moves from the safe haven’s into higher risk related assets and currencies in commodity related countries such as Australia, New Zealand and Canada.

This is not happening.

In fact (generally speaking) the commods (in particular AUD) are getting more or less hammered, and exhibiting extreme weakness in the face of equity markets still clinging near their highs.

When you see USD cratering as it has over recent days, but in turn see that the Australian Dollar is EVEN WEAKER – you know without question – Houston we have a problem.

With Australia’s economy so tied to its trade with China, there is little doubt that the global macro shift towards “risk aversion” is already very much in play as AUD has been completely obliterated with lots of room for further downside.

I’ve tried on several occasions to “trade a bounce” as we’ve seen surface evidence of “risk on” in equity markets but unfortunately – that’s all it is….. “surface”.

Clearly our friend “risk” is quietly sneaking out the back door.

Reading the Tea Leaves: What Commodity Currency Weakness Really Tells Us

The China Connection: More Than Just Trade Numbers

When AUD tanks despite a weakening dollar, you’re witnessing something far more significant than temporary market noise. Australia’s economic fate is inextricably linked to China’s appetite for iron ore, coal, and agricultural products. But here’s what most traders miss – it’s not just about current demand. The Australian dollar is essentially a proxy for global growth expectations, and right now, those expectations are getting destroyed. China’s property sector continues its slow-motion collapse, their manufacturing PMI numbers keep disappointing, and their stimulus measures are proving about as effective as a band-aid on a severed artery. When smart money sees AUD/USD breaking key support levels around 0.6500, they’re not just betting against Australia – they’re betting against the entire global growth narrative.

The CAD Conundrum: Oil’s False Prophet

Canadian dollar weakness tells an equally compelling story, but with a different villain. Oil prices have been relatively stable, yet CAD continues to underperform against most majors except AUD. This divergence screams volumes about what’s really happening beneath the surface. The Bank of Canada’s dovish pivot, combined with housing market vulnerabilities and sticky inflation concerns, has created a perfect storm for the loonie. But the real kicker? Even with oil holding above $70, CAD can’t catch a bid. That’s your canary in the coal mine right there. When a petrocurrency can’t rally on decent energy prices, it’s telling you that currency traders are pricing in something much worse than what’s currently visible in commodity markets.

Cross-Currency Signals: Where the Real Action Lives

Forget USD pairs for a moment – the real story is unfolding in the crosses. AUD/JPY has been absolutely obliterated, breaking through multiple support levels like they were made of tissue paper. This isn’t just about Australian weakness; it’s about global risk appetite evaporating in real-time. When you see AUD/JPY, AUD/CHF, and CAD/JPY all painting similar pictures of systematic selling, you’re witnessing institutional money repositioning for something significant. The yen and Swiss franc aren’t strengthening because their economies are powerhouses – they’re strengthening because money is fleeing risk assets faster than rats from a sinking ship. These cross-currency movements often lead USD moves by days or even weeks, making them invaluable for positioning.

Central Bank Divergence: The Policy Trap

Here’s where things get really interesting. The Reserve Bank of Australia and Bank of Canada are stuck between a rock and a hard place. They can’t aggressively cut rates without further decimating their currencies, but they can’t maintain hawkish stances with their economies showing clear signs of weakness. This policy paralysis is exactly what creates sustained currency trends. Meanwhile, the Fed still has room to maneuver, the ECB is dealing with its own set of problems, and the Bank of Japan continues its yield curve control circus. When central banks lose their policy flexibility, their currencies become sitting ducks for systematic selling pressure.

The commodity currency weakness we’re seeing isn’t some temporary technical correction – it’s a fundamental repricing of global growth prospects. Smart money doesn’t wait for official recession announcements or dramatic headlines. They position based on what currency markets are telling them, and right now, the message is crystal clear. The risk-on trade that dominated post-pandemic markets is dying, and commodity currencies are just the first casualties. When AUD breaks below 0.6400 and CAD starts approaching 1.40 against the dollar, don’t say you weren’t warned. The surface-level strength in equity markets is nothing more than a facade, while the real money has already started moving to safety. Currency markets don’t lie – they just tell uncomfortable truths that most traders aren’t ready to hear.

Possible Hope For Gold

It’s been some long and grueling months for gold traders, and those watching PM’s and the miners in general. Week after week of potential bottoms or reversals – only to be followed by  selling, selling and more selling. The price of both silver and gold in the “paper markets” passed the point of “rational” some months ago with seemingly no end in sight – a real tough spot for those holding strong…for sure.

We touched on this some weeks ago in that the problem with todays “investing environment” is that it “isn’t rational” – not in the slightest bit! With the amount of global stimulus being pumped into markets / Central Bank intervention etc – this isn’t in any way the market that most of you may be accustomed to investing in. Looking for similar results as one has experienced in the past has likely been recipe for disaster.

The fundamental reasons for owning gold have not changed, and likely grow stronger by the day as “paper money” planet wide is printed like toilet paper with hopes of keeping the ship sailing in the right direction just a little while longer.

How do you keep your sanity as a trader of Gold?

I would advise dropping your expectations. As simple as that.

I find it pretty unlikely that anyone is going to “time the trade” and make some massive “get rich quick” type thing any time soon with the purchase of Gold – however…..if one can lower their short-term expectations and try not to “treat it like a trade” – there’s plenty to made…….. if you can remain patient.

With the US dollar moving considerably lower over the next few months – this may be a decent time to start building positions – but in all…..we could just as easily see Gold consolidate here for months, and months on end. One needs to realize the Fed’s agenda and how a blatant rise in the price of Gold seriously undermines the goal of crushing USD – so as long as Ben’s got his finger on the printing presses – It’s hard to imagine gold getting too too  far out of the gates.

Strategic Positioning in a Manipulated Gold Market

Dollar Weakness Creates Tactical Opportunities

The Dollar Index (DXY) has been showing clear signs of structural weakness, particularly against commodity currencies like the Australian and Canadian dollars. When you see AUD/USD and USD/CAD making sustained moves that correlate with gold’s underlying strength, you’re witnessing the market’s attempt to price in real debasement despite the paper suppression. Smart money isn’t just buying gold outright – they’re positioning in currency pairs that benefit from dollar weakness while maintaining exposure to commodity strength. The EUR/USD has been grinding higher despite Europe’s own monetary mess, which tells you everything about how weak the dollar’s foundation really is.

What most retail traders miss is that gold doesn’t trade in isolation. It’s part of a broader currency ecosystem where central bank policies create ripple effects across multiple asset classes. When the Fed continues quantitative easing while simultaneously trying to suppress gold prices through paper market manipulation, they create arbitrage opportunities in the FX markets that savvy traders can exploit. Look at how GBP/USD moves in relation to gold spikes – there’s often a lag that creates profitable entry points for those paying attention.

The Carry Trade Unwind and Precious Metals

Here’s what the mainstream financial media won’t tell you: the massive carry trades built on cheap dollar funding are starting to unwind, and when this accelerates, gold will benefit regardless of paper market shenanigans. Japanese yen strength against the dollar isn’t just about Bank of Japan policy – it’s about global deleveraging that forces money back into hard assets. USD/JPY has been one of the most manipulated pairs over the past decade, but even central bank intervention has limits when fundamental forces align.

The real tell is in the emerging market currencies. When you see sustained strength in currencies like the Brazilian real or South African rand against the dollar, despite their own domestic challenges, you’re witnessing capital flows that understand the dollar’s long-term trajectory. These countries are major gold producers, and their currency strength often precedes significant moves in gold prices by weeks or even months. BRL/USD and ZAR/USD aren’t pairs most retail traders watch, but they’re leading indicators for anyone serious about timing precious metals entries.

Central Bank Gold Accumulation vs. Public Perception

While Western central banks play games with paper gold markets, Eastern central banks continue accumulating physical gold at unprecedented rates. This creates a disconnect that shows up in currency flows before it shows up in gold prices. Watch the Chinese yuan’s movements against the dollar – when USD/CNY weakens consistently, it often coincides with periods of Chinese gold accumulation that eventually pressure paper markets higher.

The Russians have been even more aggressive, using gold purchases as a tool of monetary policy while simultaneously working to undermine dollar hegemony. This isn’t just about portfolio diversification – it’s economic warfare played out through currency and commodity markets. When you see unusual strength in RUB/USD despite sanctions and geopolitical tensions, it’s often because gold backing provides real stability that paper currencies can’t match.

Timing Your Gold Exposure Through Currency Signals

Instead of trying to catch falling knives in gold directly, use currency markets as your early warning system. When you see coordinated weakness in the Dollar Index combined with strength in commodity currencies and unusual flows into traditional safe havens like the Swiss franc, you’re getting advance notice of gold’s next move. CHF/USD strength despite Swiss National Bank intervention is one of the clearest signals that smart money is positioning for dollar debasement.

The key is building positions gradually while monitoring multiple currency pairs for confirmation. Don’t wait for gold to break through obvious resistance levels – by then, the easy money has been made. Watch for EUR/GBP stability combined with EUR/USD strength, which indicates European money is flowing away from both British and American assets toward something else. That something else is often precious metals, even if the move doesn’t show up immediately in gold futures markets.

Remember, we’re not trading in free markets anymore. Every major currency and commodity market shows signs of intervention and manipulation. But these distortions create opportunities for those willing to look beyond the obvious and position themselves ahead of the inevitable adjustments that must come.

Canada Update – TSX Rejection

I’m going to keep it short for the “non believers”.

The Canadian Index topped (in my view) back at 12, 800 on March …March something er rather.

As per the “normalcy bias” posts posted…then reposted…then reposted – it’s unlikely anyone up there gave the analysis a second thought as “this shit doesn’t happen in Canada!”

Here we can see a “retest” of the highs over the past few weeks…and the blatant rejection at “said levels” some weeks ago.

(you may need to click to enlarge this chart)

Tsx_June_5

 

In any case…….it is what it is.

Isn’t it?

The Commodity Currency Reality Check

CAD/USD: When Central Bank Rhetoric Meets Market Forces

Here’s what the talking heads won’t tell you – the Canadian Dollar’s weakness isn’t some temporary blip tied to seasonal lumber exports or hockey playoffs. This is structural decline in motion, and the TSX telling this story months ahead of the currency pairs should surprise absolutely no one paying attention. When you’ve got the Bank of Canada playing catch-up to Fed policy while sitting on a housing bubble that makes 2008 look quaint, the writing’s been on the wall since those March highs I called out.

Look at CAD/USD if you want the real story. We’ve been grinding higher through this entire “Canadian resilience” narrative, and every dip gets bought by forex traders who understand that commodity currencies don’t magically decouple from their underlying economic fundamentals. The correlation between the TSX energy sector and CAD strength has been gospel for decades – until it isn’t. And right now, it isn’t.

Oil’s False Prophet Complex

Everyone’s favorite Canadian Dollar bull case keeps circling back to oil prices like it’s still 1985. “Oil’s holding above $70, CAD should be stronger!” Yeah, well, should doesn’t pay the bills in forex trading. The relationship between WTI crude and CAD strength has been deteriorating for months, and anyone still trading that correlation is fighting yesterday’s war with tomorrow’s ammunition.

Here’s the reality check: Canada’s energy sector isn’t driving currency strength anymore because global energy dynamics have shifted. The U.S. energy independence story isn’t just American propaganda – it’s fundamentally altered how oil price movements translate to currency flows. When WTI spikes, money doesn’t automatically flood into CAD-denominated assets like it used to. It flows into USD energy plays, American energy infrastructure, and dollar-hedged commodity strategies.

This disconnect explains why the TSX peaked when it did, and why every attempt to reclaim those highs has failed miserably. The market’s not broken – it’s evolved. And Canadian policymakers are still playing by the old rules.

The Housing Bubble’s Currency Implications

Let’s talk about the elephant in the room that every Canadian financial media outlet refuses to address honestly: the housing market. When your entire economic growth story depends on Canadians borrowing against inflated real estate to fund consumption, you don’t have an economy – you have a leveraged bet on property speculation.

The mortgage stress tests? Window dressing. The foreign buyer taxes? Political theater. The real stress test is happening right now in currency markets, where international capital flows vote with actual money instead of wishful thinking. Foreign investors aren’t just cooling on Toronto condos – they’re cooling on Canadian Dollar exposure entirely.

This creates a feedback loop that compounds the TSX weakness. As international portfolio flows reduce CAD allocation, Canadian asset prices face downward pressure, which reduces the appeal of CAD-denominated investments, which reduces international portfolio flows. It’s not rocket science, but apparently it’s advanced enough to confuse most Bay Street analysts.

Trading the Breakdown vs. Fighting the Trend

So what’s the actionable intelligence here? Simple – stop fighting the trend and start trading the breakdown. Every bounce in Canadian assets, whether TSX equities or CAD currency pairs, represents selling opportunity for traders positioned correctly. The “buy the dip” mentality that worked in Canadian markets for the better part of a decade has shifted to “sell the rip,” and the sooner traders adapt, the better.

For currency pairs, this means CAD/USD continues grinding higher despite temporary pullbacks. For cross-pairs, it means CAD weakness against EUR, GBP, and especially JPY as risk-off sentiment combines with Canadian-specific headwinds. The commodity currency trade isn’t dead – it’s just shifted away from CAD toward AUD and NZD, where central bank policy and economic fundamentals align more coherently.

The March highs I identified weren’t just technical resistance – they represented the peak of a narrative that no longer matches economic reality. Fighting that reality might feel patriotic, but it’s expensive patriotism that currency markets will continue punishing until something fundamental changes in Canadian economic policy or global commodity dynamics.

It is what it is, indeed.

Why Markets Are Moving Lower

As much as the Fed would have you think otherwise ( as the current chatter of “QE tapering” leads headlines) markets are “selling off” for exactly the reasons that a market “should” sell off. We’ve been over this on several occasions as the SP 500 looks set to reverse at more or less the exact spot we’d looked at some weeks ago.

SP 500 Upper Level Resistance

What I find particularly amusing about this – is how the media and Fed are doing all they can to suggest the reason for this weakness is the Fed’s recent “whisper” that it may taper it’s QE programs, when in reality nothing could be further from the truth!

The market moves lower on poor guidance and “so so” earnings, weak global growth projections – and all the other “normal reasons” that markets move.

The Fed wants you to believe this “downturn” is due to the potential withdraw of stimulus – so you will applaud more stimulus! The Fed/media  is “aligning itself” with the current weakness as to look like ” the hero” when time comes for the announcement of FURTHER STIMULUS.

As the summer correction runs its course – markets will be “begging” for answers, begging for understanding as to “why it can’t go up forever! “why! why Ben why!?”

It can’t go up forever because at some point….some point – the fundamentals will indeed catch up with the QE freight train.

I remain short USD and long JPY against nearly everthing under then sun – as a “currency salad” I look to enjoy this summer. I may however put the bowl down at a moments notice as Central Bankers have been known to spoil the odd picnic.

 

 

 

 

The Real Market Dynamics Behind the Smoke and Mirrors

Global Growth Reality Check

While the Fed orchestrates this theatrical performance about tapering fears, let’s examine what’s actually driving currency flows in the real world. European data continues to disappoint, with Germany showing manufacturing weakness that extends well beyond seasonal adjustments. China’s credit impulse remains negative despite their supposed “reopening boom,” and commodity currencies are getting crushed accordingly. The AUD/USD can’t hold above 0.67, CAD is bleeding against everything except maybe the Turkish Lira, and even the historically resilient NOK is showing cracks against the JPY cross.

This isn’t about some hypothetical reduction in bond purchases six months down the road. This is about global trade volumes contracting, shipping rates collapsing, and central banks outside the G7 already cutting rates while pretending everything is fine. When you see the South Korean Won getting hammered despite their relatively stable fundamentals, you know the risk-off sentiment runs deeper than Fed theater.

The Yen Carry Trade Unwind Accelerates

Here’s where it gets interesting for those of us positioned correctly. The JPY strength we’re seeing isn’t just seasonal repatriation flows – it’s the systematic unwinding of carry trades that have been the backbone of risk asset inflation since 2020. USD/JPY breaking below 130 wasn’t a technical fluke; it was the market finally acknowledging that negative real rates in Japan versus deteriorating growth prospects everywhere else makes the Yen attractive again.

The Bank of Japan’s yield curve control is actually working in reverse now. By keeping their rates pinned while global growth expectations crater, they’ve inadvertently created the most attractive safe haven currency on the planet. EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY, AUD/JPY – pick your poison. These crosses are heading lower as European recession fears mount and the UK continues its slow-motion economic car crash. The funding currency is becoming the destination currency, and most market participants are still fighting the last war.

Dollar Weakness Has Only Just Begun

The DXY’s failure to hold above 105 tells you everything you need to know about the supposed “Fed hawkishness” narrative. Real rates are still deeply negative, inflation expectations remain anchored well above target, and now we’re supposed to believe that a few dovish whispers about future tapering are driving dollar weakness? Please.

The dollar is weak because the US current account deficit is exploding again, because fiscal policy remains expansionary regardless of political theater, and because the rest of the world is finally building alternative payment systems that don’t require dollar intermediation. When you see central banks from Brazil to India settling trade in their own currencies, that’s not a temporary shift – that’s structural dollar demand destruction.

EUR/USD grinding higher isn’t about European strength; it’s about dollar weakness masquerading as risk-on sentiment. Same story with GBP/USD bouncing despite the UK looking like an economic disaster zone. Cable above 1.30 with British inflation still running hot and their housing market teetering? That’s pure dollar weakness, nothing more.

Positioning for the Next Phase

The summer correction in risk assets creates the perfect setup for what comes next. As equity markets continue their reality check and credit spreads widen, the Fed will inevitably pivot back to full accommodation mode. But here’s the twist – this time, the currency markets won’t respond the same way. The dollar’s reserve currency premium has been permanently impaired, and JPY strength will persist regardless of what Powell says at Jackson Hole.

Smart money is already positioning for this reality. Short USDJPY, short EURUSD puts, long precious metals in Yen terms – these aren’t contrarian trades anymore, they’re following the new trend. The commodity currency collapse creates opportunities too, but only against the dollar. AUD/JPY and CAD/JPY have much further to fall as China’s slowdown accelerates and North American housing bubbles deflate.

Central banks will indeed try to spoil this party, but their ammunition is increasingly limited. Currency intervention only works when you’re fighting temporary dislocations, not structural shifts. And brother, what we’re seeing now is as structural as it gets.

Commodities Moving Up – USD Down

Let’s continue looking out further – looking out longer term.

Let’s “get deep” if you will.

Simple questions. Simple principles. Simple facts.

What happens to the price of commodities if the value of USD goes down?

Am I seeing things? Or does nearly every single commodities future contract from orange juice to soy beans LOOK PRETTY FREAKIN GOOD RIGHT HERE?

Stop looking at the ridiculous stock market for a second and consider the direction things are headed?

Stop looking at the stock market for a minute!

The USD Debasement Trade Is Just Getting Started

Currency Debasement Mechanics: Why Commodities Are the Ultimate Hedge

Here’s what every forex trader needs to understand about currency debasement and commodity prices. When central banks flood the system with liquidity, they’re essentially diluting the purchasing power of their currency. The USD has been on a printing spree that would make Weimar Germany blush. More dollars chasing the same amount of real assets means higher prices for those assets. Period. This isn’t rocket science – it’s basic monetary theory that’s been proven countless times throughout history.

Look at the DXY chart and tell me you don’t see a currency in serious trouble. The Dollar Index has been painting lower highs and lower lows, and the fundamental backdrop supports continued weakness. Meanwhile, commodities are priced in USD globally. When the dollar weakens, it takes more dollars to buy the same barrel of oil, bushel of wheat, or ounce of gold. This inverse relationship is forex trading 101, yet most traders are completely missing this massive structural shift.

The Fed’s Impossible Position: Inflation vs Economic Growth

The Federal Reserve is trapped in a corner of their own making. They can’t raise rates meaningfully without crushing an economy built on cheap money and massive debt loads. Corporate America has gorged itself on low-interest debt for over a decade. Housing markets are leveraged to the hilt. The government’s interest payments alone would become astronomical with normalized rates. So what’s their only option? Keep the printing press running and accept higher inflation.

This creates a perfect storm for commodity prices. The Fed’s dovish stance keeps real interest rates negative, making yield-bearing assets less attractive compared to hard assets. Smart money is already rotating into commodities, precious metals, and commodity-linked currencies. The Australian Dollar, Canadian Dollar, and Norwegian Krone are all benefiting from this rotation. These commodity currencies are outperforming the USD, and this trend has serious legs.

Global Currency Wars: The Race to the Bottom Accelerates

It’s not just the US debasing its currency. The European Central Bank, Bank of Japan, and Bank of England are all engaged in competitive devaluation. But here’s the key difference: the USD still holds reserve currency status, meaning global commodities are priced in dollars. When the world’s reserve currency weakens, it creates massive dislocations in global commodity markets.

China knows this game better than anyone. They’ve been stockpiling commodities for years, understanding that currency debasement is inevitable. Beijing is positioning the Yuan as an alternative reserve currency while accumulating real assets. The writing is on the wall for anyone willing to read it. The USD’s dominance is being challenged, and commodities are the beneficiaries of this monetary regime change.

Portfolio Positioning: Beyond Traditional Forex Pairs

Stop trading USD/EUR and USD/GBP like it’s 2015. The real money is being made in commodity-linked plays and hard asset proxies. The Canadian Dollar benefits from oil strength. The Australian Dollar moves with iron ore and gold. The South African Rand correlates with precious metals. These aren’t just currency trades – they’re macro positioning plays that capture the broader commodity supercycle.

Agricultural futures are screaming higher, energy complex is building a base, and precious metals are breaking out of multi-year consolidation patterns. This isn’t coincidence – it’s the inevitable result of monetary policy gone wild. Traders focusing solely on traditional forex pairs are missing the biggest wealth transfer in decades.

The smart money isn’t debating whether commodities will rise – they’re positioning for how high and how fast. Food security, energy independence, and precious metals as monetary alternatives aren’t fringe ideas anymore. They’re mainstream investment themes driven by irresponsible fiscal and monetary policy. The commodity supercycle is here, and it’s being fueled by currency debasement on a scale never seen before. Position accordingly.

Kongonomics – Japan In Real Trouble

“The following is taken largely from the newletter of John Mauldin”

After the collapse of what might still be the largest economic bubble in history, in 1989, Japan is still mired in a 24-year non-recovery. Nominal GDP in 2011 was almost exactly what it was 20 years earlier, in 1991. You can find other ways to measure nominal GDP which indicate limited growth; but compared to the US and China, nominal growth in Japan has been virtually non existent.

Japan’s gross debt to GDP ratio is expected to top 245 per cent this year, according to estimates by the International Monetary Fund – which is considered to be “ridiculously high”.

They cannot continue to grow their debt at the current rate. There is a limit. No one knows for sure what that is, but it is getting closer. And they know it. So they have to get their fiscal deficit below the growth rate of nominal GDP.

If JGB (Japanese Government Bonds)  interest rates rise 2% in Japan, then the government must pay almost 80% of its revenues (as currently received) just to cover the interest on its debt. Even a 1% rise would be fiscally devastating.

The Abe government plans to raise taxes. Japan’s current sales tax is 5%, due to increase to 8% next year and 10% by 2015 with hopes of generating further revenues , but this will also hurt consumer spending. So round and round it goes.

The government of Japan has no choice. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s radical experiment with macroeconomic stimulus will create a debt and monetary overhang so huge that it may just bankrupt the financial system and quite possibly trigger hyper-inflation, and at this point – there is no turning back.

I’m watching this closely as my theory that the “EU Zone” would be our catalyst for “global fireworks ahead” may very well be replaced by Japan as this is developing extremely quickly.

I believe the “easy money” short JPY is now gone, and am currently positioned “long JPY”.

Nice call Kong! The Nikkei is down a wopping -2,500 points since your post : https://forexkong.com/2013/05/25/nikkei-20-year-chart-rejection/

The JPY Reversal: Why Smart Money is Positioning Long

Technical Confluence Supporting the Yen’s Bottom

The JPY’s structural reversal isn’t just fundamental—it’s technically screaming at us. Look at USD/JPY hitting multi-decade resistance near 125.00, a level that’s rejected price action consistently since the Plaza Accord dynamics shifted global currency flows. The weekly RSI showed extreme overbought conditions for months, while the monthly chart displayed clear divergence between price and momentum. When you combine this with the BOJ’s inevitable policy pivot, you get a recipe for massive unwinding of carry trades that have dominated flows for years.

Smart money has been quietly accumulating JPY across multiple pairs. EUR/JPY’s rejection at 140.00 was particularly telling—European banks have been massive JPY shorts, using the yen as funding currency for their peripheral bond plays. That trade is now toxic. GBP/JPY’s failure to hold above 170.00 confirms the broader theme. These aren’t random technical levels—they’re structural points where decades of central bank intervention and carry trade flows converge.

The Carry Trade Unwind Accelerates

Here’s what most retail traders miss: the JPY carry trade isn’t just about Japan. It’s the foundation of global risk appetite. When hedge funds and institutions borrowed yen at near-zero rates to buy everything from Australian bonds to emerging market equities, they created a web of interconnected positions that dwarf Japan’s domestic economy. The unwind of these positions creates forced buying of JPY regardless of Japan’s internal economic situation.

AUD/JPY dropping below 90.00 signals the commodity carry trade is dead. NZD/JPY’s collapse through 85.00 confirms it. These currency pairs served as proxies for global growth expectations, funded by cheap yen. Now that growth is slowing globally while Japan’s relative position improves through lower energy imports and manufacturing reshoring, the entire thesis reverses. The yen becomes a haven again, not just a funding currency.

Policy Divergence Creates Opportunity

The Federal Reserve’s aggressive tightening cycle creates an interesting dynamic with BOJ policy. While the Fed fights inflation with rate hikes, Japan’s inflation remains structurally low due to demographics and productivity gains. This divergence typically favors the dollar, but we’re reaching limits. USD/JPY above 140.00 triggers intervention from the MOF—they’ve made this crystal clear. More importantly, real interest rate differentials are compressing as US inflation stays elevated while Japanese inflation moderates.

Central bank intervention isn’t just about verbal threats anymore. Japan’s foreign exchange reserves are massive, and they’re prepared to use them. The MOF’s recent operations weren’t just warning shots—they were testing market depth and establishing price levels where they’ll defend the yen aggressively. When a central bank with unlimited domestic currency printing capability decides to defend a level, betting against them becomes extremely expensive.

Positioning for the Long JPY Trade

The mechanics of this trade require precision. Simply buying JPY against the dollar might work, but the real money is in cross-currency opportunities. EUR/JPY offers excellent risk-reward as the European Central Bank faces its own crisis with peripheral bond spreads widening and energy costs crushing competitiveness. The European economy’s dependence on Russian energy makes it structurally weaker than Japan’s pivot toward energy independence.

GBP/JPY presents another compelling short opportunity. The UK’s current account deficit and political instability contrast sharply with Japan’s improving external balance and stable governance. More importantly, the Bank of England’s hiking cycle is approaching its terminal rate while the BOJ maintains policy flexibility. This creates a convergence trade that could deliver significant returns as rate differentials compress.

Risk management remains crucial. Use JPY strength against commodity currencies like AUD and CAD as hedge positions. These pairs offer better technical entry points and align with the broader theme of carry trade unwinding. The key is patience—this reversal took years to develop and won’t resolve in weeks. Position sizing should reflect the long-term nature of this structural shift while maintaining flexibility for short-term volatility that intervention operations will inevitably create.

Global Growth – What's It Gonna Be?

With the continued stream of data coming out of the U.S looking less than impressive, and the constant reminders of China’s impending slow down – there comes a point where one truly needs to step back  and take a good hard look at the reality of our current situation.

We’ve discussed “normalcy bias” here before as well the effectiveness of “money printing” and Central Bank interventions….as well we’ve been over hundreds of charts / values / levels etc navigating the day-to-day “ebb and flow” of currencies around this planet.

But what about the larger view? I mean – THE LARGER VIEW.

We know that the money printing can’t last forever. We know that the largest consumer economy on Earth (the U.S) is essentially flat to worse – after massive devaluations of its currency. We know that China is slowing down. We know that Europe is in no better shape than it was several years ago – and likely in worse shape behind the scenes.

We see / read that nearly every panel / comittee / board / analysis / is projecting for Global GDP to fall – not rise.

Short of advances in space exploration and biotech – what do you see as potentially the “next driver” in global growth?

Not some “housing number”..not some “fed announcement or recovery bullshit” – I’m talking about something that will actually SPUR GROWTH ( as did the Internet for example….the Industrial Revolution etc…) ?

If nothing immediately comes to mind then I suggest taking another moment to consider – how long do you seriously think this “Ponzi scheme” can continue short of something REAL happening to kick-start another phase of growth on this planet?

What’s it gonna be?

The Uncomfortable Truth: Central Banks Are Out of Ammunition

Let’s be brutally honest about where we stand. The Federal Reserve has painted itself into a corner with near-zero interest rates for over a decade, and their European counterparts have gone full-blown negative. When your main policy tool is already maxed out and you’re still seeing anemic growth, what exactly is Plan B? The ECB’s deposit rate sitting at -0.5% isn’t spurring investment – it’s destroying pension funds and forcing capital into increasingly risky assets. Meanwhile, the Bank of Japan has been buying everything that isn’t nailed down, owning massive chunks of their own equity market, and they’re still fighting deflation like it’s 1999.

This is why EUR/USD continues to trade in these massive, directionless ranges. Neither economy has a real growth engine, so we’re left watching two broken currencies dance around parity levels while traders pretend that every ECB press conference or Fed minutes release actually matters. The reality? Both central banks are pushing on a string, and the market knows it.

The Dollar’s Fake Strength Story

Everyone talks about dollar strength, but strong relative to what exactly? A collapsing euro? A yen that’s been artificially suppressed for decades? The DXY hitting highs doesn’t mean the dollar is genuinely strong – it means every other major currency is worse. That’s not strength, that’s just being the best-looking horse in the glue factory. When you’re comparing currencies backed by economies that are all running on fumes, “strength” becomes a relative term that loses all meaning.

Look at GBP/USD grinding lower despite the UK’s supposed economic resilience. The pound isn’t weak because Britain is failing – it’s weak because the entire developed world is trapped in a low-growth, high-debt spiral that makes every major currency a liability. Central banks can manipulate exchange rates, but they can’t manufacture genuine economic productivity out of thin air.

Emerging Markets: The Canary in the Coal Mine

Want to see what’s really happening? Watch the emerging market currencies get absolutely destroyed every time there’s even a hint of dollar strength. USD/TRY, USD/ZAR, USD/BRL – these pairs are screaming that the global system is under massive stress. Emerging markets are getting crushed not because they’re poorly managed (though some are), but because the entire global financial architecture is built on cheap dollar funding that’s becoming increasingly expensive.

When countries that export real commodities and have actual growth potential can’t maintain stable currencies against a dollar backed by an economy growing at 2% annually, you know something is fundamentally broken. The carry trade dynamics that once drove EM currencies higher have completely reversed, and there’s no sign of that changing without a major structural shift in global growth patterns.

The Coming Currency Reset

Here’s what nobody wants to discuss: this system is mathematically unsustainable. You can’t have every major economy running perpetual deficits, printing money to buy their own debt, and expect currencies to maintain any semblance of real value indefinitely. Something has to give, and when it does, it won’t be a gentle rebalancing – it’ll be a complete reset of what we consider “money.”

The smart money isn’t just looking at technical levels on EUR/JPY or trying to time the next Fed pivot. They’re positioning for a world where traditional currency relationships break down entirely. That might mean a return to commodity-backed currencies, it might mean the rise of digital alternatives, or it might mean something we haven’t even imagined yet.

But make no mistake – continuing to trade currencies as if we’re still in a normal economic environment is like rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic. The current monetary system is running on borrowed time, and every central bank intervention just brings us closer to the moment when the entire house of cards comes tumbling down. The question isn’t whether this happens, it’s whether you’ll be positioned correctly when it does.