A tectonic shift is brewing in global markets, and Tokyo could become its catalyst, according to well-known portfolio manager and The Lead-Lag Report founder Michael Gayed, CFA, who has once again reminded investors of the inevitability of a liquidity crisis.
In this context, the expert again tied together the yen, gold, oil, XRP, and Treasuries, saying the system is close to the point where regulators will have to “crash stocks to save bonds”.
At the center of Gayed’s model is a currency crisis in Asia, the risks of which he has been warning about throughout 2026. The expert points to the danger of a “reverse carry trade”: for years, investors borrowed cheaply in yen to buy overheated U.S. equities, but now rate hikes by the Bank of Japan aimed at defending the currency are forcing the market to close leveraged positions, triggering an avalanche-like decline.
The situation is being worsened by an oil shock. Rising commodity prices in yen are draining Japan’s import-dependent economy. According to Gayed’s forecast, to cover the deficit, Tokyo will continue aggressively dumping U.S. Treasury bonds onto the market, putting the Federal Reserve before a difficult choice.
Why the Fed will sacrifice Wall Street and where XRP fits into this scheme
Gayed repeated his key thesis that U.S. authorities will not allow the market for their own government debt to collapse, which means they will save bonds even at the cost of falling stocks. Part of this process is already visible in July 2026, as defensive sectors such as utilities and REITs are outperforming the broader market.
However, in the event of panic, the main safe havens would be gold and long-term Treasuries.
Particular interest was sparked by the inclusion of the cryptocurrency XRP in the same line as oil and gold. Gayed once again reminded the XRP Army community of himself on social media, though the expert does not analyze the blockchain itself but evaluates the token exclusively through the lens of capital flows and the distribution of international liquidity.
In a storm on currency markets, this token, in the analyst’s view, could work as an alternative gateway capable of quickly absorbing international capital fleeing risk.
The outcome of the situation surrounding the yen and oil will show whether Gayed’s logic proves to be an accurate prediction. But right now, the analyst is urging investors to seek shelter from a global margin call not in Wall Street indexes, but in defensive instruments tied to Tokyo and Washington.


















