Check out the chart of Canadian dollar futures with the Commitment of Traders Report (COT) in the lower pane (red line for commercials, black for large speculators, and gray for small speculators):
Commercials hold their largest net-long position since early 2019. Extreme positioning such as this tends to mark key inflection points.
Why?
Because commercial hedgers represent the largest short sellers for any given market. And strong hands move markets.
Fresh two-year highs for the Gold/SPX ratio stand out this week, as gold outperforms its alternatives. It doesn't get much more bullish than fresh absolute and relative highs.
With that as our backdrop, I had Jason Perz @JasonP138 of Against All Odds Research on the show to share his view of the precious metals space.
That’s the foundational premise of relative strength studies.
Remember, we always want to buy the strongest and sell the weakest. It sounds simple. But it’s impossible to overstate its importance.
One of the best ways to increase our probability of success is to buy assets that are trending higher on absolute terms while outperforming their alternatives.
Those are key ingredients of a strong uptrend. And it just so happens that gold checks both boxes…
Let’s dive in and see what’s going on in the space! We also need to check in with a key intermarket ratio, revealing where we want to position ourselves in the coming months and quarters.
Check out the triple-pane chart of the Bloomberg Commodity Index $BCOM, the CRB Index, and our equal-weight index comprised of 33 individual contracts (EW33):
Fed Chair Jerome Powell spoke this afternoon after the central bank announced a 25-basis-point rate hike.
The fed funds futures were all over the place, from pricing in a 25-basis-point increase to a double-hike. They settled in around a single hike, with a slim chance of a pause.
But, instead of guessing the Fed’s next step or parsing Powell's words, I’ll rather sit back, wait, and prepare to trade a decisive breakout.
When I think about the latter stages of the hiking cycle or a potential pause, my mind immediately turns to one currency in particular…
The Japanese yen.
Since the Fed began raising rates last spring, the yen has been one of the strongest trending markets. It stands to reason it could experience a significant trend reversal as the Fed changes course.
Luckily, we have a clear level to set our alerts and define risk.
Buyers taking control of a market heading into the weekend exude confidence. And Gold bugs have done it two weeks in a row now and counting, as they reclaimed the former 2011 highs.
So what’s next for precious metals?
Well, if Gold priced in other major currencies is any indication (which I think it is), it looks like new all-time highs.
Buyers taking control of a market heading into the weekend exude confidence. That describes gold bulls last Friday as they drove prices higher into the close.
To no surprise, Gold kicked off the new week gapping higher and rallying more than 2.5%. We call this bullish follow-through.