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#创作者冲榜 The US dollar rises, gold rises, and crude oil also rises! Behind this triple surge, what is the market trading?
In traditional financial market logic, the US dollar index usually has a negative correlation with gold and crude oil: when the dollar strengthens, gold and oil tend to decline under pressure. However, in yesterday’s market, this classic pattern was completely broken.
As of the close on March 28: the US dollar index rose 0.22%, closing at 100.164; spot gold surged 2.59%, at $4,488.40 per ounce; WTI crude oil soared 7.85%, closing at $101.51 per barrel. Three assets rising together—what market signals are being sent?
It actually reflects the market trading a dual logic of “risk aversion + supply shocks”:
1️⃣ Risk aversion logic: US stocks decline, geopolitical risks intensify, and funds flow into both the dollar and gold;
2️⃣ Supply logic: Crude oil driven by geopolitical and supply-side factors, exhibiting an independent trend;
3️⃣ Sentiment divergence: Different assets price “risk” along different dimensions—gold prices “uncertainty,” oil prices “supply shocks,” and the dollar prices “interest rate differentials + safe haven.” This phenomenon of “triple surge” often occurs during periods of highly complex market sentiment and unclear macro themes, and investors should be cautious of increased short-term volatility risks.
Although it occurs less frequently in history, it is not without precedent. It reminds us that in a context of intertwined macro variables and frequent geopolitical risks, traditional asset correlations may temporarily break down. Behind this triple surge is not market “mistakes,” but rather capital voting with their feet, expressing complex judgments about the current macro environment.