Gave Warns: US Bonds May Collapse First Next Year, Market Shifts from "Rewarding AI Spending" to "Rewarding Fire Sales," Asian Currency Appreciation Could End Gold Bull Run

Deep News
Dec 04

Prominent investor and CEO of Gavekal Group, Louis-Vincent Gave, made a striking prediction in a December 4 interview: The alignment between the Federal Reserve and the U.S. Treasury is now inevitable, and its long-term consequence will be the collapse of the U.S. bond market.

Gave cited the deterioration of Japan’s government bond market as a precursor, describing this pattern as the "Turkey scenario"—sacrificing bond and currency values to achieve nominal GDP growth. In such an environment, savers will abandon bonds and flock to cash-generating tangible assets like stocks and precious metals.

Regarding asset allocation, Gave noted that the erosion of capital value in a zero-interest-rate environment drives investors toward risk assets. He believes gold’s outlook hinges on Asian currency movements, particularly the undervalued yen. He speculated that Asian currencies could appreciate in 2026, prompting capital repatriation and weakening gold demand—disrupting the recent gold trade logic.

Additionally, Gave sharply questioned the IPO preparations of AI giants like Anthropic, suggesting this may signal a turning point in capital-intensive bull markets and bubble risks. He observed a market shift from "rewarding spending" to "rewarding asset fire sales," doubting whether AI firms have missed their optimal IPO window.

**Key Interview Takeaways:**

1. **Bond Market Collapse Likely First** Regardless of whether the Fed cuts rates in December or implements more cuts by 2026, the Fed-Treasury alignment is set. Gave predicts bonds will be the first to collapse, drawing parallels to Japan’s accelerating bond sell-off despite stock market indifference.

2. **Gold as a Zero-Rate Hedge, Not Inflation** Gold and silver are perceived as inflation hedges but actually protect against zero-rate policies. Asian buyers (e.g., Japan, Korea) dominate demand, but currency appreciation could reverse this trend.

3. **AI’s Capital-Intensive Bubble Risks** The market’s tolerance for AI’s massive spending may be waning. Examples like Oracle’s failed data center financing and SoftBank’s 40% plunge after shifting funds to OpenAI suggest a pivot toward rewarding asset divestments over expenditures.

4. **Asian Currency Revaluation as 2026’s Key Theme** If Asian currencies rebound, capital may flow back to local assets, undermining gold’s rally and challenging recent investment strategies.

**Interview Excerpts:**

- **On Bonds vs. Stocks:** "If bond yields rise to 4.5%-4.75%, will it crush stocks? Probably not—higher financing costs aren’t catastrophic for most firms."

- **On Gold’s Dependency:** "Gold’s fate ties to Asian currencies. If the yen strengthens, Japanese REITs will rise, and gold demand may fade."

- **On AI’s Sustainability:** "To justify current AI spending, annual revenues must hit $2 trillion—double global ad industry income. This implies replacing 20-30% of the workforce, raising societal upheaval concerns."

Gave’s analysis underscores a precarious transition in global markets, where fiscal-monetary coordination, currency shifts, and AI’s capital demands collide, potentially reshaping investment landscapes by 2026.

Disclaimer: Investing carries risk. This is not financial advice. The above content should not be regarded as an offer, recommendation, or solicitation on acquiring or disposing of any financial products, any associated discussions, comments, or posts by author or other users should not be considered as such either. It is solely for general information purpose only, which does not consider your own investment objectives, financial situations or needs. TTM assumes no responsibility or warranty for the accuracy and completeness of the information, investors should do their own research and may seek professional advice before investing.

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