|

What yields, Dollar, and Gold tell us now

US 10-year yield: Directionless, but with potential to dominate macro trends

When it comes to macro influence, few charts rival the U.S. 10-Year Treasury Yield (TNX). It affects everything from mortgage rates to equity valuations, risk appetite to sector leadership. But for all its weight, the yield has gone nowhere lately, stuck in a wide, volatile range following a historic surge from pandemic-era lows.

From a technical analysis perspective, we’ve connected the major lower highs with a descending trendline and the higher lows with an ascending one, forming what resembles a triangle pattern. These setups often act as continuation patterns, with breakouts more likely to occur in the direction of the preceding move. In this case, that suggests an eventual breakout higher in yields and lower in bond prices.

A measured move from the breakout point could target a shift of roughly 170 basis points—the approximate height of the pattern’s base. That would imply a potential surge to above 6.4% if the breakout occurs near 4.7%. On the flip side, a break below the rising trendline of the triangle around 3.8% would suggest a retracement back toward 2%. With the current yield around 4.4%, this puts it nearly equidistant from breakout and down levels.

Though the range-bound price action may appear uneventful, beneath the surface, the implications are profound. A decisive move in either direction could ripple through global equity markets, currency valuations, and commodity prices. With global debt loads at record highs, the stakes are elevated—this may not just be the most important chart of the moment, but potentially of the decade.

Dollar Index breaks down — But don’t count out a rebound

After a multi-month slide, the U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) is sitting near a critical juncture. The breakdown below the 100 level—a round number and widely watched psychological support—confirmed a structural shift in trend, opening the door to a longer-term move toward the 90 level. This zone, around 100, previously a ceiling for years, had flipped to support—until that support gave way on a weekly closing basis.

While this break was technically meaningful, momentum signals suggest that a short-term rebound could be in the cards. The Relative Strength Index (RSI)—a commonly used momentum oscillator—has been declining but has notably failed to push below the 30 threshold, which typically signals oversold conditions. That resilience hints at underlying demand even amid broader weakness.

RSI readings are more effective in range-bound or gradual-trending markets, and in strong directional trends, they can stay overbought or oversold for extended periods without consequence. However, the inability to confirm the DXY’s price breakdown with a deeper RSI drop creates a possible bullish divergence.

Adding to the case is the formation of a potential falling wedge—a classic bullish reversal pattern—combined with increasingly bearish sentiment surrounding the dollar. Taken together, these conditions suggest the dollar may be primed for at least a tactical bounce.

If a rally does develop, the key test will be whether the DXY can reclaim and hold above the 100 level on a consecutive weekly closing basis. A move back above that threshold would suggest the recent decline was more corrective than trend-ending.

Gold takes a breather — Not a backstep

Gold continues to assert itself as one of the strongest trending assets in the market, printing new all-time highs multiple times in recent months. In environments like this—where price is extended but not reversing—simple, trend-respecting tools tend to be more effective than oscillators or countertrend indicators.

Rather than searching for a top, we’ve leaned on moving averages and price envelopes to frame the current action. Price envelopes are bands plotted above and below a selected moving average, often used to identify overbought or oversold conditions relative to trend. In this case, the 20-week moving average with a percentage buffer has provided a helpful structure for capturing gold’s stair-step advances without getting shaken out by short-term noise and reducing the risk of whipsaw signals.

Over the past two years, gold has respected the upper and lower bounds of its envelope remarkably well, often finding support at the midline (the moving average) during consolidations. While the metal has struggled to push meaningfully above $3,400 in recent weeks, this pause appears more like digestion than distribution. The envelope itself remains in a clear uptrend, suggesting the broader momentum is intact.

With strong trending assets, simplicity often yields better results. In this case, the path of least resistance still points higher, even if the short-term action remains choppy. Unless the price decisively violates the lower boundary of its envelope or the trend in the moving average turns down, the evidence continues to favor eventual continuation.

In short, this is a breather, not a backstep. And in strong uptrends, that distinction can make all the difference.


Unlock exclusive gold and silver trading signals and updates that most investors don’t see. Join our free newsletter now!


Unlock exclusive gold and silver trading signals and updates that most investors don’t see. Join our free newsletter now!

Author

CMT Association Research Team

The CMT Association is a global credentialing body that has served the financial industry for nearly 50 years.

More from CMT Association Research Team
Share:

Markets move fast. We move first.

Orange Juice Newsletter brings you expert driven insights - not headlines. Every day on your inbox.

By subscribing you agree to our Terms and conditions.

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD tests 1.1800, closes in on a fresh two-month high

EUR/USD extends its gains for the second consecutive day on Tuesday and trades near 1.1800. The broad-based US Dollar weakness and a potential policy divergence between the European Central Bank and the Federal Reserve keep the bullish bias intact heading into the holiday season.

GBP/USD climbs above 1.3500 area, renews 11-week peak

GBP/USD extends its weekly rally and trades at its highest level since early October above 1.3500. The US Dollar remains under persistent bearish pressure heading into the Christmas break, while Pound traders largely brush off the latest interest rate cut from the Bank of England.

Gold approaches $4,500 as record-setting rally continues

Gold builds on Monday's impressive gains and advances toward $4,500, setting fresh record-highs along the way. Heightened geopolitical tensions, combined with the ongoing US Dollar (USD) selloff ahead of the Q3 GDP data, help XAU/USD preserve its bullish momentum.

US GDP expected to highlight steady growth in Q3

The United States Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) will publish the first preliminary estimate of the third-quarter Gross Domestic Product on Tuesday, at 13:30 GMT. Analysts expect the data to show annualized growth of 3.2%, following the 3.8% expansion in the previous quarter.

Ten questions that matter going into 2026

2026 may be less about a neat “base case” and more about a regime shift—the market can reprice what matters most (growth, inflation, fiscal, geopolitics, concentration). The biggest trap is false comfort: the same trades can look defensive… right up until they become crowded.

XRP steadies above $1.90 support as fund inflows and retail demand rise

Ripple (XRP) is stable above support at $1.90 at the time of writing on Monday, after several attempts to break above the $2.00 hurdle failed to materialize last week. Meanwhile, institutional interest in the cross-border remittance token has remained steady.