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Poll of the day:

source: NYTimes
In four words: Bad jobs. Strong dollar.
And suddenly the market had two problems to solve.
Because in the normal playbook, those two things rarely show up together.
Normally the logic works like this:
Weak payrolls → weaker economy → Fed more likely to cut rates → lower yields → weaker dollar.
This time, however, just as the payroll report disappointed, the U.S. dollar was having its strongest week in more than a year.
Part of that strength came from the usual suspect: geopolitics. As tensions in the Middle East intensified, global capital did what it has done for decades during uncertain moments — it moved toward the dollar.
That creates a strange situation.
Weak economic data normally helps gold and other rate-sensitive assets.
But a stronger dollar pulls in the opposite direction, because commodities priced in dollars suddenly become more expensive for buyers around the world.
So instead of one clear signal, markets got two signals pointing in different directions.
And that’s where the story really begins.
Because when investors have to choose between growth fears and currency strength, markets tend to get a little… indecisive.
Here’s the story ⇩
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Gold Heard the Payroll Report
Once the payroll numbers hit the tape, gold reacted almost immediately.
Economists had expected the U.S. economy to add about 59,000 jobs last month.
Instead, the report showed the opposite.
The economy lost 92,000 jobs, while the unemployment rate ticked up to 4.4%.
Health Care (−28k): Mostly temporary strike activity at physician offices, which removed workers from payroll counts for the month.
Information / Tech (−11k): Ongoing restructuring and layoffs as tech companies continue correcting post-pandemic over-hiring and improving efficiency.
Federal Government (−10k): Budget tightening and program roll-offs, with federal employment now down about 330k since Oct 2024.
Under normal circumstances, that kind of data would be music to gold investors’ ears.
And for a moment, the metal behaved exactly as the textbook would suggest.
Spot gold jumped roughly 1.4% on Friday, climbing back above $5,150 per ounce.
But the rally ran into a problem.
Because at the exact same time gold was reacting to the jobs report, another market was moving much faster.
The U.S. dollar.
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Over the last thirty years, a peculiar gold signal has flashed three times.
Each time, gold soared in price. The first time was back in the 2000s: the dot-com mania was nearing its peak, money was flooding into any and all tech stocks, and equity valuations were trading at nosebleed levels.
At the time, gold was despised by Wall Street.
Goldman Sachs called it “a 19th-century asset.”
One of Merrill Lynch’s top investment analysts said that it was only for “grandmothers and conspiracy theorists.”
And two of America’s leading economists at the time called it a “barren asset.”
The second signal came in 2008, amidst the chaos of the financial crisis, gold prices dropped briefly below $800 an ounce…
And finally, the third signal:
Three “all-in” moments, each of which seemed crazy at the time.
But for one man, it was the most obvious move to make.
Thanks to this little-known gold signal, he made an absolute killing each of the three times this gold signal flashed.
And right now, it is again predicting a shocking new price for gold in the near future.
The Dollar Crash-Landed Into the Story
While gold was reacting to the payroll data, the U.S. dollar was quietly having its strongest week in more than a year.
And that matters more than it sounds.
Gold and the dollar usually move in opposite directions. When the dollar strengthens, commodities priced in dollars become more expensive for international buyers, which tends to weigh on demand.
Part of the move came from geopolitics.
As the conflict in Iran expanded, global investors moved capital into the dollar.
So gold ended up caught in a tug of war.
Weak economic data was pulling the metal higher.
But a surging dollar was pushing back just as hard.
And … the dollar won.
Despite Friday’s bounce, gold is still heading toward its first weekly decline in five weeks.

source: Apmex
Oil Enters the Equation
Just as investors were digesting the payroll report, another variable moved sharply.
Oil.
Prices are now heading toward their largest weekly gain since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

And when oil jumps quickly, investors begin recalculating …
Inflation.
Higher energy prices ripple through transportation, manufacturing, and consumer goods. That complicates the central bank outlook — especially at a moment when the labor market is already showing signs of slowing.
So the market suddenly found itself juggling two forces:
Slowing growth on one side.
Rising cost pressures on the other.
Not the most comfortable combination.
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Bitcoin Tests the $70K Line
Crypto reflected that uncertainty almost immediately.
Bitcoin briefly rallied above $70,000 earlier in the week, reaching nearly $74,000 before momentum faded.
By Friday, the asset had slipped back toward $68,000, unable to hold the psychological $70K level.
Options markets tell the same story.
A large cluster of hedging activity has formed around $60,000, suggesting traders are preparing for downside volatility even as some investors continue to bet on a breakout toward $75K–$76K.
In other words, conviction is split.
Some traders see the rally as the start of the next leg higher.
Others see it as nothing more than a relief bounce inside a volatile macro environment.
In Other News
Just as markets were digesting those signals, another development caught investors’ attention.
BlackRock limited withdrawals from one of its $26 billion private credit funds after redemption requests surged.
Investors asked to withdraw roughly 9.3% of the fund, but the firm capped redemptions at 5%, returning about $620 million instead of the full amount requested.
This kind of gating isn’t unusual in private credit.
These funds invest in long-term loans that can’t easily be sold overnight, so many of them limit withdrawals during periods of heavy redemption requests.
Still, the move highlighted a broader issue.
The private credit market has ballooned to roughly $1.8 trillion, and episodes like this remind investors that semi-liquid assets aren’t always liquid when volatility appears.
It’s not necessarily a crisis.
But it’s a signal.
And markets tend to pay attention to signals.
To Sum Up
By the time the payroll report arrived, markets had already been digesting a series of signals.
→ Gold reacting to softer growth expectations
→ Oil rising on geopolitical risk
→ Bitcoin struggling to sustain momentum
→ Private credit investors requesting liquidity
Individually, none of these developments defines the macro outlook.
But together they suggest investors are beginning to reassess the balance between growth, inflation, and liquidity.
And when growth slows, inflation pressures rise, and liquidity starts getting tested, investors tend to reduce risk.
Lesson of the Day

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