Equities: The Unsustainable Calm
Stocks are pushing toward 7,000 on the main index while 180-day volatility sits at eight-year lows, around 11%, well below the ten-year average of 17–18%. That kind of calm is unsustainable. I expect volatility to revert, producing at least a 10% down year - the biggest and most consequential ebb-tide event ever because the market capitalization is roughly 2.3 times GDP, the highest reading since the late 1920s.
Key Risk Indicator
Market Cap / GDP Ratio: 2.3x
This valuation extreme hasn't been seen since the late 1920s, immediately preceding the Great Depression. Historical precedent suggests significant mean reversion ahead.
Cryptocurrencies: The Dead-Cat Bounce
High-speculation digital assets peaked late last year near six figures and have already broken down into a clear bear market. The recent bounce to the low 70,000 zone is textbook dead-cat behavior in a downtrend. I anticipate a move much lower, possibly toward 10,000, as the space purges excess.
Crypto Market Dynamics
There was one cryptocurrency in 2009; now there are over 33 million. The most durable part has been crypto-dollars (stablecoins), whose market cap has exploded from a few billion to nearly 200 billion. Everything else - joke tokens included - faces heavy pressure.
- 2009: 1 cryptocurrency (Bitcoin)
- 2026: 33+ million tokens
- Stablecoin Growth: $200B market cap
- Expected Move: Major assets toward $10,000
Precious Metals: High-Price-Cure Pattern
Precious metals show the same high-price-cure pattern. The benchmark metal trades well above $5,000, roughly twice its 60-month average and 60% above its 200-week moving average - the most extended reading since 1979–80. That signals a multi-year top is likely forming, similar to the 2011 peak.
| Metal | Current Price | 60-Month Avg | Extension | Target |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gold | $5,000+ | $2,500 | 60% above 200-week MA | $4,000 |
| Silver | $100+ | - | Worst drop since 1980 | $50 |
| Copper | $6+ | - | Asian ETF enthusiasm | $5 |
I look for a retreat toward 4,000, triggered by supply responding to high prices and demand cooling. Its industrial cousin suffered its worst single-day drop since 1980 recently and I see it more likely heading toward 50 than holding above 100. Thrifting and drawer supply will appear once prices stay elevated long enough.
Industrial Metals & Energy
Other metals - palladium, platinum, copper - have moved in near-perfect lockstep lately, driven by stockpiling and ETF enthusiasm, especially in Asia. But they remain tethered to global growth. With China exporting deflation (its ten-year yield near 1.8%), industrial demand looks vulnerable. Copper failing to hold above six would not surprise me; a stock-market correction could easily push it toward five.
Energy Market Fundamentals
Energy markets are oversupplied despite geopolitical noise. Crude is being propped up by headline risks, but fundamentals point lower when the next leg of equity weakness arrives.
Macro Backdrop: Shifting to Deflation
The macro backdrop is shifting from inflation to normal post-inflation deflation. Reverse wealth effects from falling asset prices will hit consumption hard. Fiscal stimulus has reached its limit; more spending would only fuel the inflation narrative that dominated recent elections.
Policy Constraints
Central-bank policy faces political headwinds, but history suggests independence will prevail when inflation reappears. Still, once equities roll over meaningfully, rates will likely drop fast regardless of who sits in the chair.
The Clear Opportunity: Government Bonds
Against that landscape, long-duration government debt stands out as the clearest opportunity. Thirty-year yields bumping against 5% have repeatedly failed to break higher. I expect them to fall toward 3%, lifting bond prices substantially (futures moving from the low 110s toward 140).
Strategic Positioning
Long-Duration Government Bonds: The Natural Put on Equities
This sector becomes a natural put on equities: a 10–20% sustained stock decline could deliver 30%+ returns here while most other assets suffer.
- 30-Year Yields: Currently at 5%, target 3%
- Bond Futures: Expected move from 110s to 140
- Equity Correlation: Inverse relationship during crashes
- Expected Returns: 30%+ during 10-20% stock decline
Market Ratio Analysis
The S&P-to-gold ratio has already broken down hard, dropping from over 2 ounces per point toward 1.38. A return to parity (1:1) would require either much lower stocks or much lower gold - or, most likely, a combination. Gold grabbing alpha so aggressively usually precedes trouble for beta assets overall.
S&P/Gold Ratio Breakdown
| Previous High: | 2+ ounces per S&P point |
| Current: | 1.38 ounces per point |
| Target (Parity): | 1:1 ratio |
| Implication: | Lower stocks and/or lower gold ahead |
Bottom Line: 2026 As The Reversal Year
My bottom line is straightforward. 2026 could be remembered as the year momentum finally reversed. Risk assets are priced for perfection; any normalization of volatility ends that illusion.
Recommended Positioning
- Cash: Maintain high liquidity for opportunities
- Long Government Bonds: 30-year duration preferred
- Avoid: Equities, cryptocurrencies, commodities at current levels
- Risk Management: Overweighting anything else carries outsized downside
Cash and long government bonds look like the prudent stance until the flush is complete. Overweighting anything else at these levels carries outsized downside.
PolyMarkets Investment Strategies, Market Research, February 16, 2026