Year-End Mechanics: Flows Over Fundamentals
December forex isn't driven by fresh macro data — it's driven by balance-sheet realities:
- Rebalancing flows: Pension funds and SWFs reset to benchmark weights. Dollar's outperformance forces buying
- Window dressing: Managers juice returns by rotating into winners. Long dollar has been THE trade
- Thin liquidity: Desks thin out from mid-December, amplifying directional bias
Institutional Favorites
The pros aren't swinging for fences in thin markets — they're riding trends with carry:
- Long USD/JPY: Still the king. BOJ delayed, carry rebuilding. 165–170 in sight before New Year
- Short EURUSD: Eurozone growth anemic, ECB cutting. Grinding toward 0.95–0.98
- USD vs EM basket: USDMXN, USDTRY, USDBRL for carry and structural weakness
Positioning data backs it: CFTC specs are long dollar but not extreme — room for more.
Risks and January Flip
The big caveat: year-end flows can reverse violently in January. Once rebalancing is done, the dollar can give back gains fast if positioning is too crowded.
Watch for signs of exhaustion — extreme spec longs, sharp VIX drops, or surprise dovish Fed whispers. But right now? The path of least resistance is higher DXY into Christmas.
Bottom Line
Institutions trade November-December with discipline: ride the mechanical dollar bid, collect carry where it exists, and let thin liquidity do the heavy lifting.
This isn't the time for exotic pairs or counter-trend bets — it's about leaning into the regime that's worked all year.
We're keeping selective long-dollar exposure, favoring USD/JPY and high-carry EM shorts. The real conviction remains elsewhere — maximum metals allocation as the only true hedge.
Vector Ridge holds selective long-dollar forex positions (heavy USD/JPY). Maximum overweight precious/industrial metals (gold, silver, platinum, palladium, uranium); core AI infrastructure leaders (NVIDIA, Alphabet). This article represents our views at the time of publication and should not be considered investment advice.
From mid-December, balance-sheet realities dominate: pension funds and sovereign wealth funds rebalance back to benchmark weights, managers window-dress into the year's winners, and trading desks thin out. With liquidity scarce, these mechanical flows amplify the prevailing directional bias rather than any new economic release.
The institutional bias is long the dollar, with long USD/JPY the standout trade targeting 165–170 on a delayed BOJ and rebuilding carry, short EUR/USD grinding toward 0.95–0.98 on anaemic eurozone growth and ECB cuts, and USD against an EM basket (USDMXN, USDTRY, USDBRL) for carry and structural weakness.
Year-end flows can reverse violently in January once rebalancing is finished, with the dollar giving back gains fast if positioning gets too crowded. The article flags extreme spec longs, sharp VIX drops, or surprise dovish Fed whispers as the signs of exhaustion to watch.
Vector Ridge keeps selective long-dollar exposure favouring USD/JPY and high-carry EM shorts, but states the real conviction lies elsewhere — a maximum metals allocation as the only true hedge. The firm's four models (Day Trade, Multi-Hour, Swing Trade and Investing) grade each setup by conviction from A down to D, with single-model access at $20/mo and all models at $50/mo on a 7-day trial.