And bonds – the largest market in the world – continue to reveal a risk-on environment.
High-yield bonds relative to Treasuries measure risky junk bonds' performance versus the safest fixed-income asset, US Treasury bonds.
The key characteristics of these assets create a critical risk gauge for bond and equity markets, as risk-seeking behavior in the bond market also bodes well for risk assets.
Check out the High Yield versus US Treasury Bond ratio ($HYG/$IEI):
Will the Fed cut, or will they simply do nothing at the March meeting?
No one knows.
But risk-on currencies have halted their recent advance. And luckily, we have price to light our way…
Check out the New Zealand dollar-US dollar pair (NZD/USD):
The New Zealand dollar is considered a “risk-on” currency as it tends to follow risk assets (global equities and commodities). Notice the NZD/USD rallied into the holidays off its October lows, much like US stocks. That’s not a coincidence.
US treasuries finished 2023 with a bang, hitting our initial targets before Christmas.
But the long-bond trade is losing its luster.
Resistance is now coming into play as the bond market catches its breath…
Check out the US Treasury Bond ETF $TLT with a 200-day simple moving average:
I’m not a big fan of moving averages. I don’t like how they distract from price and create extra noise on the charts.
Regardless, many market participants track the long-term moving average. Bond bulls are shouting their battle cries as TLT peaks its head back above the 200-day mark.
Even ol’ King Dollar is turning the page, embracing 2024 and everything it offers with open arms. It’s shaken off the selling pressure from 2023 and appears ready to turn over a new leaf.
But a bigger dollar rally might need a little help from a nearby friend.
More on this idea in a second.
First, let’s check out the US Dollar Index $DXY chart…
The DXY is finding its footing following a brutal holiday season (dropping nearly 5 percent since November 17):
The DXY stopped catching lower right where we would expect: a shelf of former lows at approximately 101.