If you are asking about the commodity trade, there is a very clear pattern that late in the bull market as growth starts to peak you get very strong runs in commodities. This makes sense if you think about it from a production standpoint. At some point in the growth cycle you get pricing pressure from your inputs. This coincides with the last leg up in stocks and GDP growth. Firms still have pricing power to raise prices and wages follow. This forces the FED to respond by raising short term rates. At some point the rise in rates and the rise in commodity prices put pressures on margins which eventually caps growth and ends the credit cycle expansion. But commodity prices stay strong even going into the recession. This is purely from the standpoint of supply. So the first leg up in commodities is demand driven from strong economic growth, the 2nd leg up is supply driven. This is why they keep going up even as demand wanes. This is pretty much the theory Jeffrey Gundlach makes. Even if we are still 2 years out from a recession, the commodity bull has begun. It's a win win trade.
This means you want to be long oil, copper, steel, aluminum and short the dollar. Also short bonds. I see no reason why the dixy can't trade back to a 7 handle which could put the Euro north of 1.40 and the Pound back above 1.75 and the Aussie near parity. Oil is probably on it's way to 100 (at least Brent) and Copper back above 4.00.
this post got my attention!
