DXY and GSR: 2 Horsemen of Macro Apocalypse
Dollar Index and the Gold/Silver Ratio...
The TWO HORSEMEN of the Macro Apocalypse are the US Dollar and the
Gold/Silver ratio, writes Gary
Tanashian in his Notes from the Rabbit
Hole.
When the global market counterparty – the US Dollar (DXY) –
and the
Gold/Silver ratio (monetary, counter-cyclical vs. a less monetary, more cyclical/industrial precious
metal) rise moderately, then the
indication can be Goldilocks/disinflation, like the backdrop we've generally had for a year
now.
But when
they rise strongly or impulsively, the indication is to get the hell out of the asset pool, because its
liquidity will be
drained.
When they drop together, the indication is for a macro party that can
include and eventually favor
commodities, inflation trades and a generally wider scope of bullish assets than the Goldilocks
Tech/Growth theme. This would include
the precious metals, given that the elusive longer-term bullish backdrop (post-bubble contraction) is
not yet in play.
(With silver leading gold, the precious metals would likely rally along with the inflation
trades as they so often do.
The best fundamental backdrop would come after the big macro bubble pops, which is not yet the
case.)
The US
Dollar index is lurking below the pivot point of the December high, which would indicate a shift to an
intermediate uptrend and test
of the 105.90 area. It already poked above and now flags at a decision point. For their part, RSI looks
orderly climbing its EMA 20
and MACD is positive.
The Gold/Silver ratio, however, is not looking stellar in
support of USD. The trend is
still biased up, but thus far there's been nothing even approaching impulsive and if this were a stock
chart we'd be considering the
possibility of a short-term double top. In NFTRH we had noted that the up leg in the Gold/Silver ratio
that began on December 1st was
a positive divergence to the US Dollar index, which finally followed suit at the end of the
month.
If USD
and the Gold/Silver ratio continue as they have been, bullish biased but not impulsive, Goldilocks can
persist.
If USD and the Gold/Silver ratio rise impulsively, pain will likely sweep across the market
landscape.
If USD either fails here or continues firm but not impulsive, a decline in the Gold/Silver
ratio could diverge and lead
to future USD downside (much as it led the upside), allowing cyclical inflation trades and precious
metals to enter the party and
approach the punch bowl.