
DXY UP, GOLD/SPY DOWN (April 20, 2026): Whenever any asset has made an extended move in one direction, and is about to make a huge move in the opposite direction, the vast majority of analysts, brokerages, and investors become convinced that the trend of recent years will continue indefinitely. One clear example in 2026 is the very popular belief that the U.S. dollar is going to collapse and that it will no longer serve as the world's reserve currency. This perception is so pervasive that one often finds financial articles that begin with a phrase such as "because the U.S. dollar is likely to continue to decline in upcoming years" followed by the conclusion that a weakening U.S. dollar will lead to higher prices for most other assets including precious metals and global equities.
I HOLLER FOR THE U.S. DOLLAR (WHILE ALMOST EVERYONE ELSE IS EXPECTING A GREENBACK COLLAPSE)
The myth of an upcoming accelerated pullback for the U.S. dollar has encouraged at least three well-known financial publications to highlight the alleged upcoming plunge for the greenback. Barron's, The Economist, and Forbes each featured a separate cover story about how the U.S. dollar will collapse. At least the cover artists had original visual presentations as you will see from these three magazine covers beginning with Barron's from February 23, 2026:
Barron's large-font feature headline states, "The reign of the [U.S.] dollar is coming to an end. What investors can do about it." The first line of the article proclaims, "The [U.S.] dollar is in decline, and investors have to learn to live with it."
Earlier that month, on February 5, 2026, the Economist reached the same conclusion, illustrated creatively with a green snake:
The accompanying Economist headline declares, "The age of a treacherous, falling [U.S.] dollar," with the story beginning, "Those holding American assets will have to get used to it."
On February 17, 2026, Forbes featured a burning U.S. dollar bill on their magazine cover:
Forbes' headline warns, "IMF Issues Serious U.S. Dollar Collapse Warning" with this statement: "High debt, combined with persistent inflation and high interest rates, puts massive pressure on the U.S. dollar and risks a long-term erosion of its dominance as a global reserve currency."
As I was writing this essay, Elon Musk--timely as always--issued a warning that the U.S. dollar would plunge while Bitcoin surges in price. I plan to write several paragraphs or more about cryptocurrencies and how they will become nearly worthless over the next few years, but I want to remain focused here on the repeated "urgent" and "must act now" tone of most of the media's coverage of the greenback and its future prospects.
The U.S. dollar has been in a powerful bull market since March 2008 when it had slumped to its all-time bottom, followed by a slightly higher bottom in July 2008. Near the July 2008 low, the greenback was so unpopular that supermodel Gisele Bündchen declared that she wanted to be paid going forward only in euros, which that year had reached an all-time high just above 1.60 U.S. dollars. I expect the U.S. dollar to climb substantially higher during the collapse of the AI bubble, just as it had done during the collapse of the internet bubble. The U.S. dollar index will very likely reach its highest level since 1985 by the end of the decade while I expect the euro to fall below 90 U.S. cents within a few years or less.
There were no recent cover stories, or hardly any other feature articles, in any well-known media publication pointing out that the U.S. dollar index has repeatedly rebounded from all selloffs. By itself, repeated recoveries from sharp short-term pullbacks are how most powerful bull markets begin. Unfortunately they aren't recognized until after the most important part of the gains have already occurred.
As the U.S. dollar at first gradually and later more convincingly moves higher rather than lower over the next few years, this will lead to eventual depressed valuations for most assets including stocks, commodities, corporate bonds, and cryptocurrencies. Residential real estate will lose perhaps half of its current value in many neighborhoods. Only U.S. Treasuries, Tips, and related U.S. government debt is likely to benefit from a strengthening U.S. currency that will encourage investors to put more of their money in U.S. dollar-denominated time deposits.
FAR TOO MANY ANALYSTS ANTICIPATE "PERMANENTLY" HIGH ENERGY PRICES, JUST AS IN THE SUMMER OF 2008 PRIOR TO HISTORIC LOSSES BY THE END OF 2008
Besides the nearly unanimous negativity surrounding the U.S. dollar, the media have featured numerous other myths which are in sharp contrast to the way that the most experienced investors in any given sector have been behaving. One popular recent fairy tale is that because of Iran or some other combination of factors, energy prices will allegedly remain "permanently high." If this sounds familiar, it was also heard frequently during 2008 especially in the summer. Top corporate insiders sold energy shares more aggressively during the past several weeks than they had done at any time in recent decades including 2008, and shortly afterward funds of energy shares including XLE began what will eventually become dramatic percentage declines.
Energy prices soared to all-time zeniths during the first half of 2008, and then when nearly all analysts had turned bullish we had one of the biggest percentage declines for gasoline and related commodities during the second half of 2008. I expect an approximate repeat during the next several months or so.
EVERYONE IS SAYING GOLD 6000, ALMOST NO ONE IS FORECASTING 4000 (OR LOWER)
Gold and silver had their turn at reaching "permanent rally" status not many weeks ago when we had both aggressive selling by top executives of gold and silver mining companies in addition to commercials (the equivalent of insiders for futures trading) featuring substantially above-average short-to-long ratios for gold, silver, and platinum. Those ratios remain lopsidedly in favor of lower rather than higher prices. The same media outlets, analysts, and brokerages which warned investors not to buy precious metals when they were especially depressed at other key buying points, including January 2016, March 2020, and the autumn of 2022, have tooted among the most bullish horns in recent weeks. Top corporate executives of precious metals mining companies had done some of their strongest-ever insider selling when gold and silver had been peaking several weeks ago.
My favorite misleading media excuse for gold to rise in price is central bank buying. Throughout their history, central banks have been repeatedly and aggressively buying assets near peaks and selling them near bottoms. The U.K. central bank sold most of its gold in the late 1990s when prices were at all-time lows in real terms. The central bank of Canada sold most of its gold near the end of 2015 and the start of 2016 when gold prices were similarly very depressed and were set for substantial upcoming gains. China has been selling U.S. Treasuries and buying gold recently, thereby both buying high and selling low. The next few years will demonstrate why they should have been doing the exact opposite.
EXTREME OVERALLOCATION TO ANY ASSET, IN THIS CASE LARGE-CAP U.S. STOCKS, INEVITABLY LEADS TO MAJOR LOSSES
Let's turn to the U.S. stock market, where the average U.S. household allocation to equities in recent decades has averaged very close to 26%. In March 2000 the total allocation to stocks briefly touched 51.1% of total household assets, by far an all-time record until that point. In March 2026 this allocation climbed to 55.1%, as you can see from the following chart from last month courtesy of Mark Hulbert who has persistently done excellent research on this topic:
In addition to the highest ever allocation to the stock market, more than double the typical amount for the first time in history, those who are most knowledgeable about their companies' future prospects have done their highest ever selling relative to buying:
According to Bloomberg, the current AI bubble has become more overpriced relative to earnings not only compared with typical valuations but when measured against the internet bubble of 1999-2000:
John Hussman has a useful benchmark which allows you to compare any year since 1928 with the present, with clear evidence of investors recently substantially overpaying for U.S. stocks:
A combination of 1) ordinary investors having by far their highest allocation to the stock market in history; 2) close to the 99th percentile for valuations including price-to-sales, price-to-book, and price-to-GDP; along with 3) top corporate insiders making their heaviest-ever sales in history both in absolute U.S. dollars and also as a ratio to total insider buying, provide compelling evidence for an impending dramatic percentage decline especially for those shares which have experienced the most intense selling by top corporate executives including the CEO. Of course this doesn't tell us the shape of the bear market, or how high a particular index will climb before it collapses, or when the bear market will end, or how often it will bounce along the way. There is no way to know how high an overpriced asset will climb before it dramatically retreats, or when it will occur. The same is true with anything near a historic bottom: it is unknowable how low it will continue to fall before it bottoms, or when that will happen. However, you can be certain that all assets--especially those which have been priced the farthest away from fair value-- will eventually regress to the mean and usually beyond to an approximately opposite extreme.
From the intraday high on March 10, 2000 to the intraday low on October 10, 2002, QQQ lost 83.6% of its value assuming that you reinvested all dividends. Since most valuation, allocation, and insider activity measures have approached all-time records relative to fair value in 2026 compared with their greatest extremes during the internet bubble of 1999-2000, it is mathematically probable that the total percentage loss for QQQ over the next few years will be greater than the internet bubble's plunge rather than lesser. Investors are not aware how likely it is that they will lose 5 out of 6 dollars by remaining in these shares, and will likely hang in there almost all the way to the bottom when they finally sell out of fear of prices dropping even lower.
Disclosure of current holdings:
Below is my current asset allocation as of 4:00 p.m. on Monday, April 20, 2026. Each position is listed as its percentage of my total liquid net worth. The long positions should add up to about 100%, while the short positions all use U.S. Treasury bills as collateral.
I recently sold most of the stocks I had bought at all depressed points since early 2025 as I had done in late 2021 and whenever the likelihood of a significant pullback was greatest, while adding to PSQ. I also bought more TLT as this massively-shorted fund has continued to steadily form higher lows for 2-1/2 years while paying 4 dollars in annualized dividends.
The order is as follows: 1) U.S. government bonds; 2) shorts; 3) bear funds; 4) precious metals; 5) individual U.S.-listed stocks.
17-Week/52-Week/26-Week/13-Week/2-Year/8-Week/3-Year/5,10,30-Year TIPS/4-Week/6-Week/20-Year: 27.95%;
VMFXX/TIAA Traditional, TIAA money market/bank CDs/FZDXX/FZFXX/SPRXX/SPAXX/BPRXX/Savings/Checking long: 27.84%;
TLT long: 13.59%;
I Bonds long: 3.87%;
LTPZ long: 1.54%;
EDV long: 1.51%;
PMM long: 0.01%;
XLK short: 34.02%;
QQQ short: 26.75%;
GDXJ short: 1.93%;
SMH short: 1.67%;
GDX short: 0.37%;
PSQ long: 8.10%;
Gold/silver/platinum coins: 13.22%;
UTZ long: 1.30%;
CAG long: 0.77%;
GPK long: 0.37%.