Why this hedge-fund veteran says investors should own both high-flying gold and the sinking U.S. dollar

Dow Jones
01/28

MW Why this hedge-fund veteran says investors should own both high-flying gold and the sinking U.S. dollar

By Barbara Kollmeyer

Ex-Bridgewater head of commodities Alexander Campbell says it's important to hedge

Is it time to load up on the U.S. dollar?

The year is starting to look like hell in a handbag for the dollar DXY.

President Donald Trump's apparent chillax over dollar weakness is being blamed for its latest lurch down to a four-year low. However, our call of the day from the former head of commodities at hedge-fund giant Bridgewater, Alexander Campbell, says the "current freakout is overblown" and investors should own the dollar and gold.

Campbell argues in a new Substack post that one of the best portfolio diversifiers is to own both, because a long gold position is actually a short dollar position. That's not just because gold is paid in U.S. dollars, but that speculative flows tend to move to gold when the dollar is weak, says the chief executive and founder of Black Snow Capital writes.

"So I hedge. The dollar position isn't a bet that the dollar is going to rip. It's acknowledgment that my metals book is already betting it won't," Campbell says.

"My gold and silver positions are implicitly short dollars. Every ounce I own was purchasing by selling dollars. If I didn't hedge some of that out, I'd be massively exposed to dollar weakness on top of whatever the metals themselves do," he says.

He also says the buzzy "debasement" trade - investors swapping fiat currencies like the dollar for assets like gold and bitcoin - is "more vibes than execution."

"It's not that people are fleeing from the dollar into precious metals. It's that they got psyopped by perpetual bull runs and low inflation (again globalization) into radically under-owning gold and silver," Campbell says.

Investors who own metals and nothing else should understand they're implicitly shorting the dollar, he said. "If you're genuinely bearish America, the trade isn't shorting DXY. It's selling the assets that foreigners actually own," naming the ETFs for the S&P 500, long-term Treasurys and mega-cap techs.

Campbell says foreigners are still not liquidating their trillions in U.S. stock and debt.

"If you want to know whether dollar doom is real, watch the flows. Are Europeans actually liquidating their SPX? Are Japanese pension funds selling Treasurys?" He says no.

Related: How both sides of the 'Sell America' debate can be right as dollar falls and stocks climb

Campbell lays out some scenarios that would get him worried about the dollar, none of which he's seeing so far. Those would include Japanese life insurers liquidating large amounts of Treasurys, the dollar's share of international payments dropping below 40% from current levels of 50%, or investors fleeing the Tether stablecoin, USDT, which is pegged to the dollar. Finally he is looking to see if there's a credible alternatives payments system that actually clears trade.

For those still "dooming on the dollar," he suggests a short position on U.S. stocks and U.S. bonds. "Because that's what will actually get sold if foreigners decide they have had enough of Trump. DXY futures market can only take you so far," he says.

Those who see a more managed decline for the buck should own metals, dollars and shorter-duration assets. He says that's a playbook out of the 2000 to 2010 period, another period of dollar weakness.

The markets

U.S. stock futures (ES00) (YM00) (NQ00) are pointing to a strong session for tech, gains for the S&P 500, but a struggle for the Dow industrials, as gold (GC00) and silver (SI00) continue to soar.

   Key asset performance                                                Last       5d      1m      YTD     1y 
   S&P 500                                                              6978.6     2.67%   1.19%   1.94%   15.01% 
   Nasdaq Composite                                                     23,817.10  3.76%   1.70%   2.47%   20.69% 
   10-year Treasury                                                     4.238      -0.70   6.60    6.60    -30.60 
   Gold                                                                 5274       10.59%  21.17%  21.74%  90.29% 
   Oil                                                                  62.51      5.04%   7.87%   8.88%   -15.49% 
   Data: MarketWatch. Treasury yields change expressed in basis points 

The buzz

Microsoft $(MSFT)$ (see preview), Meta $(META)$ and Tesla $(TSLA)$ (see preview) will report after the close.

The Fed policy decision will come at 2 p.m., followed by a news conference with Fed Chair Jerome Powell at 2:30 p.m.

Texas Instruments stock $(TXN)$ is rising after the chip maker projected first-quarter revenue of $4.32 billion to $4.68 billion, implying sequential growth not seen in 16 years.

Microchip equipment maker ASML $(ASML)$ reported much stronger orders than expected as memory chip maker SK Hynix says it will increase capital expenditure.

Amazon (AMZN) said it will cut 16,000 positions across the company.

Best of the web

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Stablecoins are $500 billion risk to bank deposits, report finds.

SpaceX weighs June IPO timed to planetary alignment and Elon Musk's birthday.

The chart

Bob Elliot, also a former Bridgewater Associates veteran and co-founder of Unlimited Funds, shares this chart that shows what investors over time have put into stocks versus gold. Elliot says in a thread that he "put more than 10% of his savings into gold in 2005."

Also read: This chart tracks the 'single greatest predictor' of stock-market returns - it's never done this before

Top tickers

These were the top-searched tickers on MarketWatch as of 6 a.m.:

   Ticker  Security name 
   NVDA    Nvidia 
   TSLA    Tesla 
   GME     GameStop 
   MU      Micron 
   TSM     Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing 
   AMD     Advanced Micro Devices 
   AAPL    Apple 
   UNH     UnitedHealth 
   ASML    ASML 
   INTC    Intel 

Random reads

TikTik owl impressions are a thing.

Mountain lion's posh burb stroll.

H is for hot water. Sydney Sweeney's Hollywood bra-hanging fiasco.

-Barbara Kollmeyer

This content was created by MarketWatch, which is operated by Dow Jones & Co. MarketWatch is published independently from Dow Jones Newswires and The Wall Street Journal.

 

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

January 28, 2026 07:01 ET (12:01 GMT)

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