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One Of The Two Most Crowded "Consensus Trades" Of 2015 Just Ended With A Whimper

Back in January we laid out the "two most crowded trades" in the hedge fund community as we entered 2015. The first was being long the US dollar, a trade which as we updated two weeks ago has gotten so big, it is now the biggest consensus trade by a factor of 3x...

... one which when it finally does blow up, will wipe out many macro and micro "hedge" funds who have been frontrunning the Fed's rate hike since mid-2014, and the second Yellen hints at a rate cut or worse the shockwave from the USD liquidation will be felt around the globe.

The Death Of Decoupling

The Death Of Decoupling

Despite the increasing perception of policy divergence between The US and the rest of the world, it appears 'factors beyond the control of the central planners' has stymied hope for any US-based sparking of global growth. Between The Fed's liquidity withdrawal and the deflationary tsunami from an emerging world buried in credit-fueled mal-investment, it is increasingly clear that central banks have lost control and everything is now going down together.

 

The Year Nothing Worked

"This year is a wake-up call to think about lower returns for the next several years," notes BMO's Lowell Yura, warning that "investor expectations for both equities and bonds have been [mistakenly] elevated by recent history." According to data compiled by Bianco Research, 2015 could be the worst for asset allocation funds since World War I. Simply put, nothing worked, as for the first time since 2001, none of the major asset-classes returned more than 10%.

 

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