Macro Extremes (week ending March 20, 2026)

A weekly Macro, Cross Asset review of prices trading at extremes which may generate future investment ideas and opportunities

The following assets (on a weekly timeframe) either registered an Overbought or Oversold reading and/or have traded more than 2.5 standard deviations above or below its rolling mean. 

n.b. pricing of (commodity) futures contracts is only considering the immediate front month. 

denotes multiple week inclusion 

Extremes above the Mean (at least 2.5 standard deviations) 

10-year Austria, Belgian, Brazilian, Chilan, Czech, Spanish, British, Italian, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese and U.S. government bond yields.

2-year Chilean and U.S. government bond yields.

3-year U.S. bond yields

5-year EU and U.S. bond yields

7-year U.S. bond yields

20 year U.S. bond yields

British 30-year bond yields

U.S. 5–7-year Investment Grade, High Yield and BB Rated yields

TBX

U.S. 5-year bond yield minus U.S. 3 month bill yield

U.S. 5-year bond yield minus U.S. inflation rate spread

Cotton

Palm Oil *

Sugar

Oats *

AUC/CHF *

Overbought (RSI > 70)  

Aussie 3-year government bond yields.

Australian and Japanese 5-year bond yields.

10-year Japanese bond yields

Australian Coking Coal

Rotterdam Coal *

Bloomberg Commodity Index *

North American Hot Rolled Coil Steel *

AUD/EUR *

AUD/GBP *

AUD/IDR

AUD/INR

AUD/JPY

AUD/SGD

CNH/USD

TAEIX *

KOSPI

OBX *

TA 35 Index *

The Overbought Quinella (Both Overbought and Traded at > 2.5 standard deviations above the weekly mean) 

Australian, EU, British and Italian 2-year government bond yields.

British 3 & 5 year bond yields

Indonesian and Greek 10-year government bond yields.

Richards Bay Coal *

Brent Crude Oil *

WTI Crude Oil *

Heating Oil *

JKM LNG in USD and Yen *

Newcastle Coal *

Gasoline *

S&P GSCI Index *

CRB Index *

Dutch TTF Gas *

Urea (U.S, Gulf and Middle East) *

Gasoil *

AUD/ZAR

AUD/THB *

Extremes below the Mean (at least 2.5 standard deviations) 

IEI

SHY

U.S. 10 year minus U.S. 2 year bond yield spread *

U.S. 5 year minus 2 year bond yield spread

U.S. 30 year minus U.S. 10 year bond yield spread

CHF/AUD *

KRW/USD *

CAC Index

IDX Composite *

DAX Index

Nasdaq Composite

S&P 500

ASX Industrials *

ASX Industrials

UAE’s DFM Index

Oversold (RSI < 30) 

EUR/AUD

GBP/AUD *

HKD/USD

JPY/AUD

The Oversold Quinella (Both Oversold and Traded at < 2.5 standard deviations below the weekly mean) 

Australian 10 year minus Aussie 2 year bond yield spread

Australian 10 year minus Aussie 5 year bond yield spread

NZD/AUD *

INR/USD

NIFTY *

SENSEX *

Notes & Ideas: 

Government bond yields rose, again.

More 10-year government bond yields joined the overbought list.

Many more yield spreads are on this week’s list.

And Chilean 2-year yields have risen for 7 consecutive weeks.

Equities continued their decline.

Austria’s ATX, Indonesia’s IDX, DJ Industrials, BOVESPA, S&P Small Cap 600, Russell 2000, Nasdaq Composite, KRE Regional Banks, S&P MidCap 400, Nasdaq 100, S&P 500, NIFTY and ASX Financials have all declined for 4 straight weeks.

China’s FCATC has fallen for 5 weeks.

Pakistan’s KSE has declined for 8 weeks.

Inversely, Norway’s OBX has risen for 8 weeks.

Australia’s Materials Index has slumped 20% within 3 weeks.

Indonesia’s IDX Composite man reverted having fallen 27% over the past 8 weeks.

And India’s NIFTY is at its lowest close since early April 2025.

Commodities were mixed, again.

Coal, Oils, LNG, Coffee, Sugar and Distillates were the notable gainers. 

Aluminium, Copper, Tn, Orange Juice, Palladium, Silver, Gold and Soybeans were amongst the decliners.

Gold in no longer overbought, no matter which currency.

Brent Crude, Heating Oil, WTI Crude, JKM LNG, Gasoline, CRB Index and Middle Eastern Urea have closed higher for 5 weeks straight.

Sugar #16 is in a 6-week winning streak.

Iron Ore fell and snapped 4 weeks of advance.

Soybeans fell and broke a 6 week winning streak

U.S. Gulf Urea prices have risen for 15 consecutive weeks.

And Copper is at its lowest weekly close since late November, 2025.

Currencies were quieter.

The Aussie rose and AUD pairs still feature amongst the extremes.

AUD/EUR fell and snapped a 12 week rising streak.

The Loonie was weaker.

The Euro rose.

The Kiwi rose against the Aussie and broke a 6 week losing run.

CAD/JPY fell and broke a 4 week winning streak.

While the Colombian Peso has declined for 5 weeks against the USD.

The larger advancers over the past week comprised of; 

Australian Coking Coal 3.6%, Richards Bay Coal 4.6%, Brent Crude 8.8%, WTI Crude 1.9%, Cotton 2.2%, Heating Oil 13.8%, JKM LNG 18.4%, Arabica Coffee 8.6%, Cattle 1.7%, JKM LNG in Yen9.5%, Newcastle Coal 7.5%, Gasoline 8%, Robusta Coffee 6.1%, Sugar 9.3%, Sugar #16 5.3%, Dutch TTF Gas 16.9%, Urea U.S. Gulf 3.2%, Gasoil 19%, KBW Banks 1.6%, EGX 1.8%, KOSPI 5.4%, SET 1.7%, STI 2.2%, TA35 3.3% and Dubai’s DFM Index rose 2.3%.

The group of largest decliners from the week included; 

Aluminium (8.8%), Lean Hogs (2.3%), Copper (6.6%), Lithium Carbonate (2.5%), Lithium Hydroxide (2.1%), Tin (8.4%), Natural Gas (2%), Orange Juice (19%), Palladium (8.5%), Platinum (3.5%), Uranium (2.9%), Silver in AUD (16.2%), Silver in USD (15.8%), Gold in AUD (11%), Gold in CAD (10.5%), Gold in CHF (10.8%), Gold in EUR (11.6%), Gold in GBP (11.2%), Gold in USD (10.5%), Gold in ZAR (10.2%), Oats (4.9%), Rice (2.5%), Soybean (5.2%), Wheat (3%), Shanghai Composite (3.4%), CSI 300 (2.2%), All World Developed ex USA (1.6%), AEX (4%), ATX (1.3%), CAC (3.1%), DAX (4.6%), DJ Industrials (2.3%), FCATC (4.3%), MIB (3.3%), IBB (2.3%), IBEX (2%), Russell 2000 (1.8%), Nasdaq Composite (2.1%), FTSE 250 (3.3%), S&P MidCap 400 (1.6%), Mexico (2.3%), Nasdaq 100 (2%), Copenhagen (2.7%), Helsinki (2.4%), Stockholm (5.1%), South Africa 40 (4.8%), SMI (4%), IGPA (1.7%), S&P 500 (1.9%), TSX (3.8%), FTSE (3.3%), Vietnam (2.9%), ASX 200 (2.2%), ASX Materials (7.1%), ASX Industrials (2.4%) and the ASX Smal Caps fell 4%.

March 22, 2026

By Rob Zdravevski 

rob@karriasset.com.au 

ASX Industrials hits one extreme low

The ASX Industrials index has fallen 10% over the past 3 weeks,

and is trading at some extremes not seen for a while,

albeit, it’s not enough to register a quinella or trifecta of extremes.

March 22, 2026

rob@karriasset.com.au

The Blackstone barometer

The circles in the attached price chart of Blackstone told me when not to chase and buy the stock.

And if you owned it, these moments were also good signals to suggest selling.

For those who like to buy and hold, today’s price is the same level seen 5 years ago.

And now……..

March 21, 2026

rob@karriasset.com.au

Macro Extremes (week ending March 13, 2026)

A weekly Macro, Cross Asset review of prices trading at extremes which may generate future investment ideas and opportunities

The following assets (on a weekly timeframe) either registered an Overbought or Oversold reading and/or have traded more than 2.5 standard deviations above or below its rolling mean. 

n.b. pricing of (commodity) futures contracts is only considering the immediate front month. 

denotes multiple week inclusion 

Extremes above the Mean (at least 2.5 standard deviations) 

Austria, Brazilian, Swiss, Czech, Spanish, British, Greek, Indonesian, Italian, Norwegian, Polish and Portuguese 10-year government bond yields.

2 & 3 year British and U.S. government bond yields.

British 5 year bond yield

U.S. 5-7 year Investment Grade, High Yield and BB Rated yields

Palm Oil

Corn

Wheat *

AUD/CHF

AUD/ZAR

CAD/EUR

CAD/GBP

Overbought (RSI > 70)  

Australian 2- & 3-year government bond yield.

Japanese 2, 5 and 10 year bond yields.

North European Hot Rolled Coil Steel *

Gold in CHF, EUR, GBP and ZAR *

AUD/GBP *

AUD/IDR *

AUD/JPY *

AUD/SGD *

CNH/USD *

TAEIX *

OBX *

TA 35 Index

The Overbought Quinella (Both Overbought and Traded at > 2.5 standard deviations above the weekly mean) 

2-year German and Italian bond yields

Richards Bay Coal *

Aluminium *

Rotterdam Coal *

Bloomberg Commodity Index *

Brent Crude Oil *

WTI Crude Oil *

Heating Oil *

North American Hot Rolled Coil Steel *

JKM LNG in USD and Yen *

Newcastle Coal *

Gasoline *

S&P GSCI Index *

CRB Index *

Dutch TTF Gas *

Urea (U.S, Gulf and Middle East) *

Gasoil *

Oats *

Soybeans

AUD/EUR *

AUD/THB *

Extremes below the Mean (at least 2.5 standard deviations) 

CHF/AUD

KRW/USD

IDX Composite *

HSCEI *

Hang Seng *

Pakistan’s KSE

ASX Industrials

UAE’s DFM Index

Oversold (RSI < 30) 

Australian 10 year minus Aussie 2-year yield spread *

London and CME Cocoa *

Sugar #16 *

EUR/CHF *

GBP/AUD *

INR/USD

The Oversold Quinella (Both Oversold and Traded at < 2.5 standard deviations below the weekly mean) 

NZD/AUD *

NIFTY

SENSEX

Notes & Ideas: 

Government bond yields rose, again.

A host of new 10 year government bond yields joined the overbought list.

Some U.S. and EU yields are also members of this week’s edition.

And Chilean 2 year yields have risen for  weeks.

Equities continued their decline.

Only few appear in the group of advancers.

Norway’s OBX has risen for 7 weeks.

Indonesia’s IDX Composite man reverted having fallen 23% over the past 7 weeks.

The Dow Jones Transports is 10% lower over the past fortnight.

Dubai’s DFM Index has fallen 18% over the same time.

India’s NIFTY is at its lowest close since early April 2025

And some Hong Kong indices are oversold.

Commodities were mixed.

Oils, Distillates Palm Oil, Orange Juice, Oats, Soybeans and Sugar were the notable gainers. 

Coal, Coffee, Platinum, Palladium, Tin and Silver were amongst the decliners.

Gold in some currencies are no longer overbought.

Aluminium, Brent Crude, Heating Oil, WTI Crude, JKM LNG, Gasoline, CRB Index and Middle Eastern Urea have closed higher for 4 weeks straight.

Sugar #16 is in a 5 week winning streak.

Soybeans have climbed for 6 weeks.

U.S. Gulf Urea prices have risen for 14 consecutive weeks.

And Copper is at its lowest weekly close since December 29, 2025.

Currencies were busy.

The Aussie rose and AUD pairs still feature amongst the extremes.

AUD/EUR in a12 week rising streak.

The Loonie was firmer.

The Swissie fell.

And the Yen was mixed.

CAD/JPY has climbed for 4 weeks.

While the Colombian Peso has declined for 4 weeks against the USD.

The larger advancers over the past week comprised of; 

Australian Coking Coal 4.5%, Bloomberg Commodity Index 2.6%, Brent Crude 11.3%, Cocoa 2.1%, WTI Crude 8.6%, Cotton 2.6%, DXY Index 1.7%, Palm Oil 4.7%, Heating Oil 10.8%, JKM LNG 2.1%, Lumber 1.5%, Orange Juice 10.6%, Gasoline 10.7%, Sugar 1.9%, Sugar #16 2.7%, CRB Index 3.9%, Urea U.S. Gulf 3.4%, Gasoil 2.4%, Corn 1.5%, Oats 10.3%, Soybeans 2%, AEX 2.2%, China A50 2.1%, OBX 2.2%, SOX 1.8%, IGPA 1.6% and BIST rose 2.4%.

The group of largest decliners from the week included; 

Richards Bay Coal (1.8%), Rotterdam Coal (3.9%), Iron Ore (2.5%), Lean Hogs (2.3%), Arabica Coffee (2.8%), Cattle (1.6%), JKM LNG in Yen (4.4%), Lithium Hydroxide (1.7%), Natural Gas (1.7%), Palladium (5%), Platinum (4.7%), Robusta Coffee (8.4%), Tin (5.9%), Dutch TTF Gas (4.7%), Silver in AUD (3.9%), Silver in ISD (4.5%), Gold in AUD (2.2%), Gold in CAD (1.9%)< Gold in GBP (1.5%), Gold in USD (3%), All World Developed ex USA (2.3%), ATX (2.6%), KBW Banks (4.2%), IDX (5.9%), DJ Industrials (1.9%), DJ Transports (4%), S&P Small Cap 600 (2.2%), Russell 2000 (1.7%), KRE Regional Banks (2.8%), KSE (2.3%), KOSPI (1.8%), FTSE 250 (1.9%), S&P MidCap 400 (1.9%), Mexico (2.5%), Nikkei 225 (3.2%), NIFTY (5.3%), Copenhagen (1.5%), PSE (4.1%), PX (3%), SENSEX (5.5%), SMI (2%), S&P 500 (1.6%), TA35 (4.1%), Nasdaq Transports (5.7%), TSX (1.6%), Vietnam (4.1%), XBI (1.8%), ASX 200 (2.6%), ASX Materials (4.7%), ASX Industrials (4.3%), ASX Small Caps (4.7%) and the UAE’s DFM Index sunk 8.3%.

March 15, 2026

By Rob Zdravevski 

rob@karriasset.com.au 

Ahhhh, those were the days to buy Oil

The December 21, 2025 edition of my weekly, weekend Macro Extremes pointed to Brent Crude registered an oversold extreme.

That was when the long trade had an acceptable risk/reward proposition.

Any new long position (in the absence of subscribing to momentum) initiated over the past week or three wasn’t stacked with the best probability.

March 13, 2026

rob@karriasset.com.au

Alighting from the Oil train

Prices tell you everything.
As far as WTI Crude Oil prices are concerned,
it’s time to have one foot out the door.

They seldom (to never) trade to the metrics and extremes that I’m seeing today.



March 9, 2026
rob@karriasset.com.au

Macro Extremes (week ending March 6, 2026)

A weekly Macro, Cross Asset review of prices trading at extremes which may generate future investment ideas and opportunities

The following assets (on a weekly timeframe) either registered an Overbought or Oversold reading and/or have traded more than 2.5 standard deviations above or below its rolling mean. 

n.b. pricing of (commodity) futures contracts is only considering the immediate front month. 

denotes multiple week inclusion 

Extremes above the Mean (at least 2.5 standard deviations) 

Italian, Japanese, British and European 2-year government bond yields

British and European 3-year bond yields

Czech, British, Greek, Indonesian, Italian, Norwegian and Portuguese 10-year bond yields

Oats *

AUD/ZAR

CAD/EUR

CAD/GBP

USD/KRW

Overbought (RSI > 70)  

Australian 2- & 3-year government bond yield

Australian 10 year minus U.S. 10-year bond yield spread

North European Hot Rolled Coil Steel

Gold in AUD, CAD, CHF, EUR, GBP, USD and ZAR *

AUD/EUR *

AUD/GBP *

AUD/IDR *

AUD/INR *

AUD/JPY *

AUD/SGD *

AUD/THB

CHF/JPY *

CNH/USD *

The Overbought Quinella (Both Overbought and Traded at > 2.5 standard deviations above the weekly mean) 

Richards Bay Coal

Aluminium *

Rotterdam Coal

Bloomberg Commodity Index

Brent Crude Oil

WTI Crude Oil

Heating Oil

North American Hot Rolled Coil Steel

JKM LNG in USD and Yen

Newcastle Coal

Gasoline

S&P GSCI Index

CRB Index

Dutch TTF Gas

Urea (U.S, Gulf and Middle East)

Gasoil

Wheat *

Extremes below the Mean (at least 2.5 standard deviations) 

U.S. 5-year bond yield minus U.S. 5-year inflation breakeven rate

U.S. 10-year bond yield minus U.S. 10-year inflation breakeven rate

China A50 index

IDX Composite

HSCEI

Hang Seng

NIFTY

SENSEX

Oversold (RSI < 30) 

Australian 10 year minus Aussie 2-year yield spread *

Australian 10 year minus Aussie 5-year yield spread

U.S. 10-year minus Aussie 10-year yield spread

London and CME Cocoa *

Sugar #16 *

EUR/AUD *

JPY/AUD *

The Oversold Quinella (Both Oversold and Traded at < 2.5 standard deviations below the weekly mean) 

EUR/CHF

NZD/AUD *

Notes & Ideas: 

Government bond yields soared.

And with that, we see many new entries amongst the ‘extremes’.

Chilean 2 year yields have risen for 5 weeks,

While Japanese 10 year yield shave fallen for 5 weeks.

Every other previous streak has been broken.

Equities were smashed.

The list of extraordinary declines appear the bottom of this note.

Except for the TAIEX, all of last week’s overbought indices departed the list.

All of the winning streaks which appeared last week been snapped.

The only winning streak is Norway’s OBX sitting at 6 weeks.

Thailand’s SET, South Korea’s KOSPI and the Nikkei 225 gave up half of its gains garnered in the previous 3 or 4 weeks.

Germany’s DAX is at its lowest close in 5 months, last seen during the week ending November 17, 2025.

Spain’s IBEX closed at the same price seen during the week of December 8, 2025.

While several Asian indices are overbought.

Commodities were strong.

Coal, Oils, Distillates, Gases, Coffee, Urea and Oats were the notable gainers. 

Copper, Tin, Nickel and the precious metals were amongst the decliners.

JKM LNG mean reverted, upwards.

Wheat has advanced for 4 weeks.

Gold in ZAR and Soybeans have climbed for 5 weeks.

North American Hot Rolled Coil Steel is in a 7-week winning streak.

U.S. Gulf Urea prices have risen for 13 consecutive weeks.

Natural Gas rose and broke a 4-week losing streak.

Australian Coking Coal rose to end its 5 weeks of losses.

Gold in CAD and USD fell and snapped a 4-week winning streak.

The Copper/Gold Ratio has closed at its lowest level since February 1990 and it’s Monthly oversold reading is worth noting.

Currencies were busy.

While the Aussie fell, many of its pairs still appear amongst the extremes.

AUD/EUR in 11 week rising streak.

All of other AUD streaks came to an end, including the 8 week winning streaks for the AUD/GBP and AUD/IDR.

The USD and CAD rose.

The Euro and British Pound were firmer,

While the Yen fell.

The larger advancers over the past week comprised of; 

Australian Coking Coal 2.8%, Richards Bay Coal 14.6%, Aluminium 9.8%, Rotterdam Coal 19.8%,  Bloomberg Commodity Index 8.1%, Brent Crude 27.2%, Cocoa 11.8%, WTI Crude 35.6%, Palm Oil 8%, Heating Oil 39.5%, JKM LNG 46.5%, Arabica Coffee 4.5%, LNG in Yen 84.4%, Newcastle Coal 15.9%, Natural Gas 11.4%, Gasoline 20.2%, Robusta Coffee 4.1%, Sugar 1.5%, S&P GSCI 14.7%, CRB Index 12.6%, Dutch TTF Gas 67%, U.S. Gulf Urea 24.5%, Gasoil 53.9%, Middle East Urea 33.8%, Gold in ZAR 2%, Corn 2.7%, Oats 6.7%, Rice 4.4%, Soybeans 2.6%, Wheat 4.3% and Israel’s TA-35 equity index rose 5.5%.

The group of largest decliners from the week included; 

Baltic Dry Index (6.1%), Cotton (2.2%), Copper (4.2%), Lithium Hydroxide (3.9%), Tin (13.5%), Nickel (2.2%), Palladium (9.1%), Platinum (9.8%), Silver in USD (10%), Gold in CAD (2.6%), Gold in GBP (1.5%), Gold in USD (2%), All World Developed ex USA (6.9%), AEX (4.6%), ATX (5.2%), KBW Banks (3.6%), BUX (3.7%), CAC (6.8%), IDX (7.9%), DAX (6.7%), DJ Industrials (3%), DJ Transports (6.2%), EGX (3.5%), FCATC (5%), MIB (6.5%), HSCEI (2.6%), IBB (4.5%), HSI (3.3%), IBEX (7%), BOVESPA (5%), S&P Small Cap 600 (3.8%), Russell 2000 (4%), TAIEX (5.1%), KRE Regional Banks (2.8%), KSE (6.3%), KOSPI (10.6%), FTSE 250 (5.3%), S&P MidCap 400 (4.6%), Mexico (5.7%), NBI (4.2%), Nikkei 225 (5.5%), NIFTY (2.9%), Copenhagen (2.2%), Helsinki (3.3%), Stockholm (5.7%), PSE (4.4%), PX (2.2%), SA40 (9.7%), SENSEX (2.9%), SET (7.7%), SMI (6.6%), SOX (7.2%), IGPA (5%), S&P 500 (2%), STI (2.(%), Nasdaq Transport (7.8%), TSX (3.7%), FTSE (5.7%), Vietnam (6%), WIG (4.8%), Nasdaq Biotech (2.7%), ASX Financials (3.3%), ASX 200 (3.8%), ASX Materials (8.5%), ASX Industrials (3.2%), ASX Small Caps (4.5%), BIST (6.7%) and Dubai’s DFM fell 9%.

March 8, 2026

By Rob Zdravevski 

rob@karriasset.com.au 

The warnings were always there

In light of recent concerns about private credit,

I’m reprising some snippy comments written 2 years ago.

Sell AUD / Buy EUR

If you happen to hold (a lot of) Australian Dollars,

perhaps consider Selling your strong AUD and Buying Euro.

Whether we you are interested in buying some EUR denominated equities, or an Airbus H125 helicopter or settling the acquisition of that piece of French or Italian real estate.

I think that the fat part of the trade has been seen.

The AUD/EUR is exhibiting its 5th moment over the past 10 years of being empirically stretched.

My secondary indicators support the exhaustion of this recent advance.

March 4, 2026

rob@karriasset.com.au

Don’t go chasing high fastballs

In baseball, hitters tend to chase high fastballs, often because the ball looks larger due to its proximity to the batter’s eyes.

The higher spin and rising velocity makes it difficult to catch up to the ball.

Also, the high fastball is often a set-up’ pitch.

Here is a picture of a high fastball that I’m gonna call the South Korea KOSPI equity index.

Gravity is a bitch and parabola’s look sexy while simultaneously being fun and dangerous.

March 4, 2026

rob@karriasset.com.au