Yen Carry Trade Unwinding
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Bitcoin crashes 6%. Bonds tank 1.6%. Everyone blames normal market jitters.
Brandon Chapman spotted something far more dangerous beneath today's selloff. The Japanese yen just fired another warning shot. Most traders are completely blind to what's coming.
Someone just dropped $3.8 million on TLT calls after bonds got crushed. That's 26,000 contracts betting on a sharp reversal in treasuries. They bought above the ask price. That's not hedging. That's conviction.
Meanwhile, institutions are repositioning ahead of a potential crisis that could make August's volatility look tame.
Here's what Brandon uncovered:
- TLT call buying: 26,000 contracts at the $94 strike filled above the ask after a 1.6% drop in bonds
- Fed rate cut probability spiked to 85% for December from just 30% a week ago
- MSTR positioned with 23,000 call contracts rolled down from $270 to $165 strikes despite Bitcoin's selloff
- Ether seeing bullish call buying on December 12th and 19th strikes after a 9% decline
- Energy the only positive sector today while utilities crashed 2% on bond weakness
The Bank of Japan announces their policy decision December 18th. The Fed cuts rates December 10th. That interest rate differential is about to compress hard. When that happens, the yen carry trade gets squeezed.
Brandon walks through the exact mechanics. Traders borrowed cheap yen, converted to dollars, and bought US assets. Bitcoin, bonds, and stocks all benefited from this flow. Now that trade is reversing.
The chart tells the story. November 10th delivered a massive down day in the S&P when the yen strengthened. Today's price action in dollar/yen looks eerily similar. The head and shoulders pattern in bonds points to a technical target of $84 on TLT.
Brandon's thesis centers on timing. If Powell sounds too dovish about future cuts on December 10th, the dollar weakens further. Then the Bank of Japan announces December 18th. If they raise rates as expected, the yen strengthens dramatically. That one-two punch could trigger serious deleveraging across risk assets.
The trade opportunity sits in TLT. Brandon breaks down a specific vertical spread. Buy the $88 strike, sell the $90 strike for about a dollar. Your breakeven is $89, basically today's high. If bonds rally to $89.50 tomorrow on risk-off flows, you close at 30% gain. Wait until Friday and you target 55% following the in-out spread rules.
The pricing makes sense because TLT volatility tends to rise as you move out of the money. The market hasn't fully priced in defensive rotation out of risk assets overwhelming any treasury selling to raise dollars.
Brandon emphasizes this isn't about being bearish. This is about recognizing when major currency flows create asymmetric opportunities. The yen carry trade built up over years of rate differentials. That unwind doesn't happen in one day. But it does create volatility windows where positioning matters more than direction.
Video Length: 00:14:46
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