Gold Hits Near Term Top As Bonds Rally, USD Falls

 | Feb 15, 2016 05:12AM ET

Macro consensus trades into 2016 have not worked well, at all. This past week saw a large flush-out in positioning across financial markets. There are three consensus trades that we feel have been particularly squeezed and what we believe was a final clear out of these positions sent other assets, such as gold, to extreme levels that present a number of trading opportunities.h2 The Fed Will Hike, Others Will Not/h2

This was the premise of most consensus trades into 2016. Whilst the market was not convinced that Yellen was going to increase rates as much as the dot plot suggested, hikes were expected nonetheless. This dynamic shaped a number of trade ideas into 2016, across asset classes. We were not convinced of such hikes, which we wrote about extensively in late December, based a widening of credit spreads seeing real borrowing costs increase, reducing the need for hikes. However we did not anticipate that the market would so vigorously discount all chances of any hikes this year.

h3 Equities – Financial Stocks To Outperform/h3

In the stock market there was a view that banking stocks would outperform the wider index this year. An increase in the Fed Funds Rate would improve margins and see financial stocks outperform other sectors. This consensus trade has been doubly hit.

Firstly, the Fed hikes have not come, and expectations of them coming any time soon are near zero. Secondly, the widening in credit spreads that we highlighted in December have spread across a number of sectors. What began as a few energy companies struggling with a collapse in oil prices flowed on to other materials and mining companies, with selling fuelling more selling, and eventually leading to credit concerns at some major European banks.

h3 Currencies – USD To Strengthen/h3

In sympathy with the view that “the Fed will hike, others will not” were major bets that the USD would continue to strengthen versus other major currencies. In no pair was this consensus view stronger, and positioning larger, than in USD/JPY.

The vicious gold spike mid-last week was mainly caused by a weakening of the US dollar versus the yen. A consensus trade going into 2016 was that the US dollar would strengthen compared to the yen, given that the BoJ was loosening monetary policy while the Fed was hiking rates. This view was turbocharged with the BoJ announcing negative rates not so long ago. However, this trade has been proven wrong, as the US dollar has in fact fallen considerably against the yen.