``The potential of the carry trade as a source of future exchange rate volatility has brought back memories of October 1998 when the yen collapsed against the dollar as hedge funds unwound carry trades in response to the Russian financial crisis.”-Peter Garnham and David Pilling, Financial Times
Well, some have argued that the recent plunge in US and global stocks have been due to the unwinding of the carry trade.
Figure 4: stockcharts.com: Rising US dollar; Falling Yen and Swiss franc
Instead we see a rallying US dollar traded weighted index and a return to a positive yield slope in our midst. (Yes the Philippine Peso declined abruptly by 1.28% to Php 46.67 alongside with most of the region’s currencies, aside from an equivalent tremblor in the region’s bond markets).
The Carry trade assumes borrowing or shorting low yielding currencies and utilizing the proceeds to invest in higher yielding currency/assets. However if the costs of these currencies rises, there could be pressures to sell the invested assets and payback the loans or buyback the shorted currency, where such offsetting transactions would result to across the board selling pressures in the traditional high risk asset market classes like the emerging market assets, commodities and corporate junk bonds. We have not seen this happen yet.
In other words, if one were to speculate on whether today’s shakeout has impaired the system of leverage from which the global markets operate on, then the depiction of insouciance by the Yen and Franc as funding currencies to such levered transactions shows that either these Carry trades have produced insignificant bearing in last week’s activities or has not reached its stress level enough to trigger the purported systemic risks.
Considering the actions of the tape here and abroad, what we are in essence witnessing is a simple return to cash, from regular profit-taking activities, instead of a market bedlam as some bears suggest, of course, until prove otherwise.
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