Currency Counter-Cyclicality
You cannot read an article on the merits of buying international currencies without finding the assertion that currencies often act as a counter cycle to the stock market. It is, it appears, axiomatic in the financial industry. Here is some evidence of this property.
In the charts below I use two independent sources of information: iShares NAV data on some of their “country” funds, and the NAV data from Rydex on their currency ETFs for the same countries. I am using only the last year for most of the charts, as the last year is a picture perfect time to show what I want to show. In the charts below, the red line is always the currency NAV and the blue line is the equity market.
First of all, as you will notice as you read down the charts, November 7, 2007 was, almost to the day, the moment when international equities markets rolled over. Certainly, in almost every case, between November and January, 2008, virtually every country index shown, headed south! The Australian stock market provides a good example of this, as you can see below. The blue line represents iShares Australian Index Fund (EWA), which dropped about 25% from November 7, '07 through June 20, 2008.
The Euro zone was not much different. This index lost about 15-16% over the last year. Only Sweden turned over a little later, and only Mexico and Switzerland turned over a little earlier.
The equity markets in Sweden actually turned down several months before the others.
Interestingly enough, the Swiss economy was the most stable of those shown, as it usually is. The country has a long history of being remarkably independent of the rest of Europe, and in this decline it lost the least of any country shown.
The Mexican peso is pegged to the U.S. dollar, so its rise is substantially muted because of this. But, as with the other currencies, if interest earnings were factored into this chart, the peso would show a much more substantial gain.
Lastly, as a side note on new happenings in the currency market, there is good news for those who like pegged currencies: Rydex has filed with the SEC for four new currency ETFs. They are the Honk Kong dollar, the Singapore dollar, the Russian ruble and the South African rand.
The Honk Kong dollar is pegged to the U.S. dollar, so it will offer the carry trade investors another target for relatively high interest rate earnings and a stable currency. The chart below shows how tight Honk Kong keeps the peg. The data is for 2008.

Also, Wisdom Tree has filed for seven new currency ETFs: Australian dollar, pound sterling, Canadian dollar, New Zealand dollar, South African rand and the South Korean won. Plus, our friends at ProShares have filed for ultras and super ultras, up, down, double up and double down for a host of currencies. The mind boggles at the opportunities. However, the risks, too, are boggling, so I will stay with my stogy old carry trade play. I am glad, though, to have some other options on the horizon for my kind of investing. It will allow me to further diversity my currency holdings, which I consider a primary strategy for all investing decisions.
Get Seeking Alpha Free Stock Alerts by Email!
Get Free Stock Alerts by Email!
ETFs In Focus
-
Editor's Picks
-
Most Popular
- Energy Independence: It's About Demand, Not Supply
- Housing Prices: Bottom or Temporary Bear Break?
- McCainomics: What Can He Do?
- ETF Insights: The New Hard Assets Producers ETF
- Why Airline Stocks Are So Often Bad Investments
- The Chinese Oil Problem
- Full list of Editor's Picks »
- Three Reasons the Solar Sell-off May Be in the Early Innings »
- Five Reasons Steve Ballmer Thinks Apple's a Buy »
- Why Commodities May Be Nearing a Turning Point »
- What's in Store for the Fertilizer Industry? »
- Precious Metals Manipulation: Lawyers Prepare for Battle »
- Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News »
- Apple to Reveal Mysterious Product Transition on September 9th »
- Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News »
- Oil: The Inconvenient Truth »
- Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News »
- Sarah Palin: Wall Street's Candidate »
-
Long Ideas
-
Short Ideas
-
Cramer's Picks
- Red Hat / Qumranet Deal Adds Fuel to the Virtualization Fire
- ETF Pick of the Week: iShares MSCI Netherlands
- Altria's Last Legal Hurdle Should Be Settled This Fall
- How Wal-Mart Really Beats Expectations
- Corning: Looking Very Cheap
- Leucadia's Key to Success
- China Natural Gas: Growth Appears Certain
- Can TRW Automotive Escape the Michigan Mess?
- Things Aren't Good - Fast Money Recap (9/4/08)
- ETFs That Help You Sleep Better at Night
- Full list of Long Ideas »
- Nuance Communications: An End to Acquisitive Growth
- Short Interest Rising in Tesoro; Shorts Covering Airline Positions
- Harbinger Capital: Cut Short
- Not Much Meat on Pilgrim's Pride's Bones
- Salesforce.com: Demystifying the Force
- Should We Listen to Boone Pickens on Oil?
- Energy Conversion Devices: Ridiculously High Valuation
- Three Reasons the Solar Sell-off May Be in the Early Innings
- Is the Market Rolling Over?
- Solar and Oil, Part Deux
- Full list of Short Ideas »
- Cramer Template
- Worst Downgrades - Cramer's Stop Trading! (9/5/08)
- Pimco's Bill Gross: Jim Cramer Is 'Courageous' and 'Entertaining'
- Cramer Sees the Light - Cramer's Mad Money (9/4/08)
- Keep Buying Big Brown - Cramer's Lightning Round (9/4/08)
- Don't Buy These Bonds - Cramer's Stop Trading! (9/4/08)
- Loss of Integrity - Cramer's Mad Money Recap (9/3/08)
- Not Off the RIMM - Cramer's Lightning Round (9/3/08)
- Unbelievable Moves - Cramer's Stop Trading! (9/3/08)
- The Rally was the Real Deal - Cramer's Mad Money (9/2/08)
- Full list of Cramers Picks »
Trading Center
Hedge Fund Jobs
Job Seekers: Search jobs by category, get job alerts by email or live feed, apply online See full list of jobs »
Employers: See all recruitment options, get applications online or by email Post a job »



This article has 2 comments: