Macro Extremes (week ending May 22, 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) 

U.S. 5 and 7-year bond yields *

Norwegian, Swiss & U.S. 10-year yields

U.S. 20-year government bond yield

German & U.S. 30-year bond yields *

TBT & TBX *

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

U.S. 5 year minus U.S. 3-month yield spread *

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

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

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

U.S. 10 year divided by Australian 10-year bond yield spread

Rice *

Overbought (RSI > 70)  

Japanese 2 & 5-year government bond yields

Australian Coking Coal *

Richards Bay Coal *

JKM LNG *

Gasoline *

CRB Index *

Urea Middle East *

AUD/EUR *

AUD/IDR *

AUD/INR *

AUD/JPY *

AUD/THB *

CNH/USD *

TAIEX *

Nasdaq Composite

KOSPI *

Nasdaq 100 *

Nikkei 225

Norway’s OBX

Finland’s OMXH

Singapore’s Strait Times Index

Philadelphia’s SOX Index *

And the S&P 500

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

Japanese 10 and 30-year government bond yields *

South Korean 10-year bond yield *

USD/IDR

Extremes below the Mean (at least 2.5 standard deviations) 

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

IEF & TLT

U.S. 10 year minus U.S. 5-year government bond yield spread

Lean Hogs

Oversold (RSI < 30) 

JPY/AUD *

Indonesia’s IDX Composite Index

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

IDR/USD

Notes & Ideas:

Government bond yields fell,

Except for Chilean 10’s, Japanese 2’s & 3’s along with U.S. 2’s and 3’s.

A host of yield spreads appear in this week’s list.

Korean 10-year yields fell and snapped 5 weeks of advance.

Aussie and Canadian 10-year yields put in a bearish outside reversal week.

U.S. 2- and 3-year yields along with U.S. 5-year real interest rates have risen for 5 weeks.

U.S. minus German 10-year yield spread has climbed for 6 weeks.

While U.S. 30 year minus U.S. 10-year yield spread has fallen for 5 weeks.

And the Copper/Gold Ratio have risen for 7 straight weeks.

Equities had a positive bias.

A few more indices left overbought territory.

Thailand’s SET is in 4-week winning streak.

The S&P 500 has climbed for 8 consecutive weeks.

Vietnam fell and snapped a 7-week winning streak.

The CAC, DJ Transports, IGPA and FTSE 100 rose and snapped 4 weeks of decline.

The ASX Financials broke a run of 5 weeks of a lower close.

The ASX small caps have fallen for 5 weeks.

While Brazil’s BOVESPA has declined 11% over the past 6 weeks.

Commodities were mixed and a little quieter, relatively.

Aluminium, Coal, Gases, Coffee and Tin were the notable gainers.

Crude Oil, Distillates, Cocoa, Cotton, Cattle and Palladium were amongst the decliners.

Richards Bay Coal and Rice have risen for 4 weeks, the latter climbing 15% over that time.

Cotton has given up 9% over the past fortnight.

Palladium is 12% lower in 3 weeks.

U.S. Gulf Urea is in a 5-week losing streak.

Australian Coking Coal fell to snap its 5-week winning streak.

And the Baltic Dry Index fell and broke a 7-week losing streak.

Currencies were quiet.

The Aussie and Loonie eased.

Yen was mixed.

The Swissie and Pound Sterling firmed.

NZD/AUD rose and departed oversold territory.

EUR/CHF is in a 4-week losing streak.

Aussie/Rupee fell and broke a 6-week winning streak.

And the Aussie fell to snap 7 weeks of gains against the Euro.

The larger advancers over the past week comprised of; 

Aluminium 3.4%, Rotterdam Coal 3.2%, Arabica Coffee 2%, JKM LNG in Yen 2.3%, Orange Juice 4.3%, Robusta Coffee 2.7%, Tin3.6%, Corn 1.7%, Rice 3.3%, Soybeans 1.7%, Wheat 1.7%, All World Developed ex USA 2.1%, AEX 3.4%, ATX 2.1%, KBW Banks 3.4%, CAC 2.1%, DAX 3.9%, DJ Industrials 2.2%, DJ Transports 3.2%, FCATC 1.5%, IBEX 2.1%, S&P SmallCap 600 2.6%, Dublin 4.9%, Russell 2000 2.&%, TAIEX 2.7%, KRE Regional Banks 3.6%, KOSPI 4.7%, FTSE 250 2.5%, S&P MidCap 400 1.7%, Nikkei 225 3.1%, Helsinki 3.5%, Stockholm 3.6%, PSI 1.8%< SMI 2.1%, SOX 5.3%, IGPA 1.4%, STI 1.6%, Eurostoxx 3.3%, Nasdaq Transports 2.4%, TSX 1.9%, FTSE 100 2.7%, WIG 2.9% and the ASX Financials rose 2.1%.

The group of largest decliners for the week included; 

Bloomberg Commodity Index (1.6%), Brent Crude Oil (5.2%), Baltic Dry Index (5.1%), Cocoa (5.2%), WTI Crude Oil (4.4%), Cotton (4%), Lean Hogs (2.5%), Heating Oil (3.8%), Cattle (3.4%), Lithium Carbonate (2.5%), Natural Gas (1.8%), Palladium (4.6%), Platinum (2.6%), Gasoline (5.8%), S&P GSCI (2.6%), CRB Index (1.7%), Dutch TTF Gas (3%), Gasoil (5.7%), Urea Middle East (1.8%), Uranium (1.7%), Gold in ZAR (2%), BUX (1.6%), China A50 (1.8%), IDX (8.4%), EGX (2%), HSCEI (1.6%), Hang Seng (1.4%), KLSE (1.6%), Vietnam (2.3%), BIST (3.9%) and the ASX Industrials fell 2.2%.

May 24, 2026

By Rob Zdravevski 

rob@karriasset.com.au

Abnormal Dividend Payments Aren’t Good

The dominant conversation that prospective clients are having with me is about their desire to earn a higher yield on their money.

I’m talking yield in terms of income.

A couple years ago they were earning 6% on their Australian Dollar cash held in the bank but now they are earning 2.7% and so the chase for yield begins, mainly via sub-standard, riskier assets in order to satisfy their single, blinding and qualifying criteria of income yield.

Surely, I must have written about that particular angle previously.

But the current trend amongst listed companies who are holding excess cash or re-generating pre-crisis levels of free cash flow – is to return cash to their shareholders.

We know that over the past couple years companies have “returned cash” by re-purchasing company shares. Appropriately, they have also re-financed debt at cheaper rates. This has also improved their “earnings per share” data which the stock market and analysts have loved.

Today’s trend is to return cash by increasing the company’s dividends at larger increments than in the past. Some companies are even making interim (or extraordinary) dividends in addition to their normal payment schedule.

Is this corporate board room’s new “increasing the share price” strategy? Raise your dividends abnormally, so those who are chasing yield will buy your shares and thus send your share price higher.

This also serves management handsomely, especially if they have share price performance linked remuneration (options, bonuses etc.), but I think this is also exhibits management’s laziness for their lack of ability to find ideas on how to use their company’s money to grow the business.

Company management would be quick to suggest that “this is in the best interest of shareholders”.

I don’t like this strategy, whether it’s from a corporate or an investing perspective.Historically, I have seen this occur before.

Today, the company appeases the market by handing out the cash and Tomorrow, it needs cash again; which is when they either issue new shares (which dilutes existing holders) or borrow money (often at interest rates higher than a couple years ago) which usually equates to a higher gearing ratio in their balance sheet.

One of our investing themes is to look for companies that are retaining their earnings. Our preference is to keep the money in the balance sheet and then deploy that capital to grow the business.

All this talk of corporate activists demanding cash being returned and balance sheets being lazy – blah, blah, blah.

I’d rather see the excess money left in the company’s bank accounts instead of leaving. If the board and management can’t develop a strategy on how to use that money appropriately, then they should be leaving, not the company’s money.

I think this is better for shareholders.