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When Intermarket Correlations Break Down

Intermarket correlations are regime-dependent, and recognizing when they break down protects traders from carrying stale macro assumptions into a new regime.

T By tradernewbie · Curated for beginners
#intermarket#macro
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When Intermarket Correlations Break Down

Intermarket analysis works because assets correlate in predictable ways — until they don't. Correlation breakdowns are not failures of the framework; they are signals that the macro regime has shifted. The trader who recognizes a broken correlation first often avoids the biggest losses.

Why correlations break

Most textbook intermarket relationships assume a "normal" growth-and-inflation regime. When the macro regime changes, the relationships rewire:

  • Deflation scare: bonds and stocks can rise together (both bid as safe assets)
  • Stagflation: commodities and bonds rise together while equities fall
  • Liquidity crisis: the dollar rallies against everything, including gold, as funding stress dominates
  • Inflation shock: commodities and yields rise together while long-duration equities crater

Each regime produces different correlations. The textbook inverse dollar-gold link, for example, holds in normal times and breaks during stagflation or funding crises.

The 2022 example

2022 was a masterclass in correlation breakdown:

  • Stocks and bonds fell together (rare)
  • The dollar and gold rose together (rare)
  • Commodities and yields rose together

Traders who rigidly applied the textbook relationships — "stocks down means bonds up" — got hit on both sides. The cause was a regime shift from low-inflation growth to inflation shock, and the correlations reflected it.

How to detect a breakdown early

  1. Rolling correlation: track 30- or 60-day rolling correlations between key pairs (DXY-gold, S&P 500-10yr yield, oil-USD/CAD). When the correlation crosses zero, the regime is changing.
  2. Divergence watch: when two normally-correlated assets disagree for more than a week, something is shifting
  3. Volatility regime change: a VIX spike accompanied by a correlation flip is a classic regime signal
  4. Fundamental cross-check: is inflation accelerating? Are central banks hiking or cutting? Fundamentals explain why correlations are rewiring

What to do when correlations break

  • Stop relying on the old relationship for hedging or confirmation. If stocks and bonds both fall, a stock hedge via bonds stops working.
  • Reduce position size: correlation breakdowns usually coincide with higher volatility. Smaller is safer.
  • Identify the new regime: is this deflation, stagflation, inflation shock, or liquidity crisis? Each has its own playbook.
  • Watch for the re-coupling: correlations usually revert once the new regime stabilizes. The broken relationship isn't gone forever.

The bottom line

Intermarket correlations are not laws — they are regime-dependent tendencies. The most valuable skill in intermarket analysis is recognizing when a correlation is breaking, not when it's working. A broken correlation is the market telling you a new regime has arrived. Listen to it, or carry a stale playbook into a new game.

Related market data, powered by TradingView.

Educational content · Not financial advice · Trade at your own risk