275 results on '"carry trade"'
Search Results
2. Carry trade behavior by non-US banks
- Author
-
Homma, Yasutake and Suzuki, Katsushi
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Carry Trade Dynamics Under Capital Controls: The Case of China.
- Author
-
Balding, Christopher, Gregoriou, Andros, Tarzia, Domenico, and Zhang, Xiao
- Subjects
INTEREST rates ,CAPITAL controls ,COPPER ,COMMODITY futures ,U.S. dollar - Abstract
Despite an attractive interest rate differential between China and foreign countries, existing capital control might prevent currency carry trade strategies to be executed. We focus on the copper market to study if trades are taken in order to execute carry trade strategies. We find that copper value is related to carry trade through the onshore-offshore interest differential, while the pegged nature of the USD/CNY exchange rate makes traders indifferent to the forward risk premium. We rule out the possibility of high average payoff due to peso problems, because risk factors are insignificant, implying that carry traders are either fully hedged on FX risks, or they are unconcerned about FX risks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Current Account Uncertainty and Currency Premia.
- Author
-
Della Corte, Pasquale and Krecetovs, Aleksejs
- Subjects
ABNORMAL returns ,RISK premiums ,FOREIGN exchange rates ,FINANCIAL markets ,HARD currencies - Abstract
We empirically study the relationship between currency excess returns and current account uncertainty, measured as forecast dispersion. We find that investment currencies deliver low returns, whereas funding currencies offer a hedge when current account uncertainty is unexpectedly high. Moreover, an increase in current account uncertainty is associated with higher expected future excess returns on investment currencies. This mechanism is consistent with the recent advances in exchange rate theory based on capital flows in imperfect financial markets. This paper was accepted by Gustavo Manso, finance. Funding: A. Krecetovs thanks the Brevan Howard Centre at Imperial College London for financial support. Supplemental Material: The data files and online appendix are available at https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2023.4949. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Boosting Carry with Equilibrium Exchange Rate Estimates: Boosting Carry with Equilibrium Exchange Rate Estimates
- Author
-
Rubaszek, Michał, Beckmann, Joscha, Ca’ Zorzi, Michele, and Kwas, Marek
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Examining the Dependence Structure Between Carry Trade and Equity Market Returns in BRICS Economies.
- Author
-
Makhanya, Kabelo Collen, Bonga-Bonga, Lumengo, and Manguzvane, Mathias Mandla
- Subjects
GRANGER causality test ,INVESTORS ,ASSET allocation ,PORTFOLIO diversification ,AFRICA-China relations - Abstract
This paper contributes to the literature on carry trade by investigating the dynamic correlation and the dependence structure between the US-dollar carry trade and equity markets in the (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa (BRICS)) economies during sample observations that include regular and crisis periods. Furthermore, the nonlinear Granger causality test based on the feed-forward neural networks (FFNN) model assesses how global volatility predicts the dynamic correlation between the US-dollar carry trade and equity markets in BRICS. The paper finds the dynamic correlations between carry trade and equity markets in BRICS are more pronounced during most global crises. Moreover, the results of the symmetrised Joe Clayton (SJC) copula model showed that the lower tail dependence between the two series is higher during the various crises. Furthermore, the results of the empirical analysis show that global volatility predicts the dynamic correlations between carry trade and equity markets in BRICS only during crises. Asset managers and investors can benefit from this paper's findings regarding portfolio diversification, risk management, asset allocation, and hedging when dealing with equity assets and carry trades. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Currency Overlay
- Author
-
Abate, Guido, Basile, Ignazio, editor, and Ferrari, Pierpaolo, editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Tobin Tax, Carry Trade, and the Exchange Rate Dynamics.
- Author
-
Li, Xiaoping and Zhou, Chunyang
- Subjects
FOREIGN exchange rates ,PRICE cutting ,TAXATION ,PRICE increases ,KURTOSIS - Abstract
We propose a heterogeneous agent model including the fundamentalists, chartists, and carry traders, to describe the dynamics of exchange rates, and examine the effects of Tobin Tax on the equilibrium exchange rates. A theoretical analysis shows that an increase of Tobin tax always reduces the trading volume, and its impact on the equilibrium exchange rate depends on the agents' expectations of exchange rate movements and their weights in the markets. Our simulation exercise shows that an increase in Tobin tax may lead to an increase in volatility and price distortion and a decrease in the kurtosis and the trading volume. Our results suggest that the Tobin tax could be an emergency measure, but not a long-term policy tool to suppress speculation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Introduction
- Author
-
Read, Charles, Deng, Kent, Series Editor, and Read, Charles
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. The pricing of unexpected volatility in the currency market.
- Author
-
Lu, Wenna, Copeland, Laurence, and Xu, Yongdeng
- Subjects
PRICES ,ABNORMAL returns ,HARD currencies - Abstract
Many recent papers have investigated the role played by volatility in determining the cross-section of currency returns. This paper employs two time-varying factor models: a threshold model and a Markov-switching model to price the excess returns from the currency carry trade. We show that the importance of volatility depends on whether the currency markets are unexpectedly volatile. Volatility innovations during relatively tranquil periods are largely unrewarded in the market, whereas during the unexpected volatile period, this risk has a substantial impact on currency returns. The empirical results show that the two time-varying factor models fit the data better and generate a smaller pricing error than the linear model, while the Markov-switching model outperforms the threshold factor models not only by generating lower pricing errors but also distinguishes two regimes endogenously and without any predetermined state variables. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Carry trades and US monetary policy.
- Author
-
Falconio, Andrea
- Subjects
MONETARY policy ,INTEREST rates ,FEDERAL Reserve monetary policy ,CAPITAL movements ,U.S. dollar ,SHORT selling (Securities) - Abstract
I document that Federal Reserve expansionary monetary policy has a positive impact on the excess returns arising from currency carry trades. I show that expansive monetary surprises are associated with an increase in future real interest differentials between high interest rate currencies and the US dollar, which leads to higher capital flows toward those currencies and an increase in their returns. Since this increase is not fully compensated by a decrease in the returns from the short position in low interest rate currencies, unexpected monetary expansions in the US result in higher carry trade returns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Küresel Risk Algısının Carry Trade Belirleyicileri Üzerine Etkileri: Türkiye, İngiltere, ABD Örnekleri.
- Author
-
ERER, Deniz and GACENER ATIŞ, Aydanur
- Subjects
- *
INTEREST rates , *RISK perception , *FOREIGN exchange rates , *INVESTORS , *VECTOR autoregression model - Abstract
The aim of this study is to analyze the main determinants of carry trade activity for Turkey, England and the USA in the periods when global risk perception is high and low. From the results of TVAR model, we concluded that interest rate differential is the main factor behind carry trade activity in the periods when global risk perception is high and low. We found that exchange rate uncertainty is an element that leads to giving up carry trade activity in the period when global risk perception is high while it doesn't have any significant effect in the period when global risk perception is low in Turkey and England. However, we determined that investors in the USA continue to carry trade activity although exchange rate uncertainty rises. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Existe Lucratividade na Operação Carry Trade Real X Dólar?
- Author
-
Borges de Almeida, Anelise Palmier, Figueiredo Pinto, Antonio Carlos, Cabús Klotzle, Marcelo, and Jordão da Gama Silva, Paulo Vitor
- Subjects
INTEREST rates ,INTERNATIONAL finance - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Currency returns and systematic risk.
- Author
-
Gonçalves, Fernanda, Ferreira, Giuliano, Ferreira, Alex, and Scatimburgo, Pedro
- Subjects
CAPITAL assets pricing model ,BUSINESS cycles ,ABNORMAL returns ,HARD currencies ,CAPITAL structure ,GROSS domestic product - Abstract
We investigate the relationship between currency excess returns and Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in a Consumption Capital Asset Pricing Model. GDPs are observable systematic risk factors in our asset pricing equations. The correlation between the unobservable systematic factors is explored by Seemingly Unrelated Regressions estimations. The sample comprises the period from 1999:M01 to 2019:M12 and 48 countries. Results show that GDP growth risk is significant for most currency pairs and portfolios. We also find that they are priced in the cross‐section of excess returns. Furthermore, currency returns are directly affected by regional business cycles (Europe, America, and Asia). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Essays in international macroeconomics and finance
- Author
-
Mann, Samuel and Corsetti, Giancarlo
- Subjects
339.5 ,Monetary Policy ,High-Frequency Identification ,Monetary Union ,Labour Market ,Housing Market ,Capital Controls ,Terms of Trade ,International Risk-Sharing ,Welfare ,Pruning ,Endogenous Discount Factors ,New Open Economy Macroeconomics ,Exchange Rates ,Value ,Carry Trade ,Risk Premia ,Emerging Markets - Abstract
This collection of essays examines the topic of macroeconomic stabilisation in an international context, focusing on monetary policy, capital controls and exchange rates. Chapter 1, written in collaboration with Giancarlo Corsetti and Joao Duarte, reconsiders the effects of common monetary policy shocks across countries in the euro area, using a data-rich factor model and identifying shocks with high-frequency surprises around policy announcements. We show that the degree of heterogeneity in the response to shocks, while being low in financial variables and output, is significant in consumption, consumer prices and macro variables related to the labour and housing markets. Mirroring country-specific institutional and market differences, we find that home ownership rates are significantly correlated with the strength of the housing channel in monetary policy transmission. We document a high dispersion in the response to shocks of house prices and rents and show that, similar to responses in the US, these variables tend to move in different directions. In Chapter 2, I build a two-country, two-good model to examine the welfare effects of capital controls, finding that under certain circumstances, a shut-down in asset trade can be a Pareto improvement. Further, I examine the robustness of the result to parameter changes, explore a wider set of policy instruments and confront computational issues in this class of international macroeconomic models. I document that within an empirically relevant parameter span for the trade elasticity, the gains from capital controls might be significantly larger than suggested by previous contributions. Moreover, I establish that a refined form of capital controls in the shape of taxes and tariffs cannot improve upon the outcome under financial autarky. Finally, results show that the conjunction of pruning methods and endogenous discount factors can remove explosive behaviour from this class of models and restore equilibrating properties. In Chapter 3, I use a panel of 20 emerging market currencies to assess whether a model that combines fundamental and non-fundamental exchange rate forecasting approaches can successfully predict risk premia (i.e. currency excess returns) over the short horizon. In doing so, I aim to overcome three main shortcomings of earlier research: i) Sensitivity to the chosen sample period; ii) seemingly arbitrary selection of explanatory variables that differs from currency to currency; and iii) difficulty in interpreting forecasts beyond the numerical signal. Based on a theoretical model of currency risk premia, I use real exchange rate strength combined with indicators for carry, momentum and economic sentiment to homogeneously forecast risk premia across all 20 currencies in the sample at a monthly frequency. In doing so, the model remains largely agnostic about structural choices, keeping arbitrarily imposed restrictions to a minimum. Results from portfolio construction suggest that returns are significant and robust both across currencies as well as over time, with Sharpe Ratios in out-of-sample tests above 0.7.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Carry Trade and Capital Market Returns in South Africa.
- Author
-
Bonga-Bonga, Lumengo and Rangoanana, Sefora Motena
- Subjects
CAPITAL assets pricing model ,CAPITAL market ,BOND market ,BEAR markets ,BONDS (Finance) ,ABNORMAL returns ,NATIONAL currencies ,STOCK exchanges - Abstract
This paper assesses the extent to which carry trade operations affect the performance of equity and bond markets in a target country, South Africa, by considering the US and the euro area as the funding countries. A two- and three-factor capital asset pricing model (CAPM) is employed to assess whether the pricing of equity and bond markets in South Africa depends on the US dollar/rand and euro/rand carry trade returns. Moreover, the paper uses the quantile regression technique to assess whether this pricing varies with the distribution of the equity and bond returns. The findings support that the US- and euro-funded carry trade are essential factors for the pricing of equity and bond markets in South Africa. Moreover, the results of the two-factor model show a negative relationship between the equity excess return and the US-carry trade returns at lower quantiles of the equity market returns. The positive relationship is observed in the upper quantiles of the equity market. The negative relationship means that carry trade activities reduce equity market returns during a bear market as investors close out their position when conditions in the equity market become unfavourable. The results of the three-factor model, controlling for the global volatility or uncertainty, show that carry trade investors exit the equity market to invest in the bond market when global uncertainty rises. This finding shows that carry trade investors choose less risky assets during rising global uncertainty. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Essays in asset pricing
- Author
-
Liu, Liu and Hyde, Stuart
- Subjects
332.6 ,asset pricing ,carry trade ,term structure models ,ambiguity aversion ,regime switching - Abstract
This thesis improves our understanding of asset prices and returns as it documents a regime shift risk premium in currencies, corrects the estimation bias in the term premium of bond yields, and shows the impact of ambiguity aversion towards parameter uncertainty on equities. The thesis consists of three essays. The first essay "The Yen Risk Premiums: A Story of Regime Shifts in Bond Markets" documents a new monetary mechanism, namely the shift of monetary policies, to account for the forward premium puzzle in the USD-JPY currency pair. The shift of monetary policy regimes is modelled by a regime switching dynamic term structure model where the risk of regime shifts is priced. Our model estimation characterises two policy regimes in the Japanese bond market---a conventional monetary policy regime and an unconventional policy regime of quantitative easing. Using foreign exchange data from 1985 to 2009, we find that the shift of monetary policies generates currency risk: the yen excess return is predicted by the Japanese regime shift premium, and the emergence of the yen carry trade in the mid 1990s is associated with the transition from the conventional to the unconventional monetary policy in Japan. The second essay "Correcting Estimation Bias in Regime Switching Dynamic Term Structure Models" examines the small sample bias in the estimation of a regime switching dynamic term structure model. Using US data from 1971 to 2009, we document two regimes driven by the conditional volatility of bond yields and risk factors. In both regimes, the process of bond yields is highly persistent, which is the source of estimation bias when the sample size is small. After bias correction, the inference about expectations of future policy rates and long-maturity term premia changes dramatically in two high-volatility episodes: the 1979--1982 monetary experiment and the recent financial crisis. Empirical findings are supported by Monte Carlo simulation, which shows that correcting small sample bias leads to more accurate inference about expectations of future policy rates and term premia compared to before bias correction. The third essay "Learning about the Persistence of Recessions under Ambiguity Aversion" incorporates ambiguity aversion into the process of parameter learning and assess the asset pricing implications of the model. Ambiguity is characterised by the unknown parameter that governs the persistence of recessions, and the representative investor learns about this parameter while being ambiguity averse towards parameter uncertainty. We examine model-implied conditional moments and simulated moments of asset prices and returns, and document an uncertainty effect that characterises the difference between learning under ambiguity aversion and learning under standard recursive utility. This uncertainty effect is asymmetric across economic expansions and recessions, and this asymmetry generates in simulation a sharp increase in the equity premium at the onset of recessions, as in the recent financial crisis.
- Published
- 2017
18. Optimal carry trade portfolio choice under regime shifts.
- Author
-
Chen, Chih-Nan and Lin, Chien-Hsiu
- Subjects
FOREIGN exchange ,FOREIGN exchange market ,INTERNATIONAL trade ,ASSET allocation ,LIQUIDITY (Economics) ,HARD currencies - Abstract
This paper studies optimal currency allocation of the carry trade in foreign exchange (FX). A number of empirical studies have documented a phenomenon referred to as the 'forward premium puzzle', which states that the carry trade is profitable on average. However, the carry reversal during the 2008 global crisis periods wiped out the profits earned by the trade. To account for the regime shifts in the joint distribution of returns on the carry trade with FX market portfolios, we adopt a Markov regime switching model. We find evidence of two economic regimes: one state captures periods of the forward premium puzzle and UIP being violated, whilst the other reports high FX volatility and negative return of carry trade portfolio. Furthermore, to quantify the economic significance of regimes in returns on currency portfolios, we consider their importance in investors' optimal portfolio allocation problem. We find strong evidence that optimal currency portfolio holdings vary significantly across regimes and across short and long investment horizons, as investors anticipate a shift out of the current state. Our results also show that the regimes partially anticipate peso events as well as the changes of funding liquidity measured by the TED spreads. A strategy that accounts for regimes, thus, generates overall stronger performance than the single-state Gaussian IID model, a carry trade procedure as well as a buy-and-hold strategy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. A machine learning approach to forecasting carry trade returns.
- Author
-
Wang, Xiao, Xie, Xiao, Chen, Yihua, and Zhao, Borui
- Subjects
MACHINE learning ,FOREIGN exchange market ,GLOBAL Financial Crisis, 2008-2009 ,INTEREST rates ,RISK premiums ,FORECASTING ,FINANCE - Abstract
Carry trade refers to a risky arbitrage in interest rate differentials between two currencies. Persistent excess carry trade returns pose a challenge to foreign exchange market efficiency. Using a data set of 10 currencies between 1990 and 2017, we find (i) a machine learning model, long short-term memory (LSTM) networks, forecast carry trade returns better than linear and threshold models and other machine learning models; and (ii) excess carry trade returns deteriorate after the 2007–2008 global financial crisis in all model forecasts, indicating that the uncovered interest rate parity may still hold in the long run. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Optimal currency hedge and the carry trade
- Author
-
Filipozzi, Fabio and Harkmann, Kersti
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. On asymmetric volatility effects in currency markets.
- Author
-
Cho, Dooyeon and Rho, Seunghwa
- Subjects
FOREIGN exchange rates ,HARD currencies ,QUANTILE regression ,AUTOREGRESSIVE models ,REGRESSION analysis ,MARKET volatility - Abstract
This paper investigates the asymmetric effects of exchange rate volatility in currency markets using high-frequency, intraday data of the most actively traded currencies over 2004–2017. The analysis is conducted by combining the quantile regression model with the heterogeneous autoregressive (HAR) model and its extensions where realized variance is decomposed into positive and negative semivariances. We find that safe haven currencies exhibit behavior different from that of other currencies. For safe haven currencies, negative realized semivariance associated with appreciation plays an important role in explaining the quantile-dependent volatility dynamics. This behavior is more pronounced during high volatility phases. The opposite holds for other currencies, i.e., positive realized semivariance associated with depreciation matters more. The results also reveal that while negative jumps associated with the appreciation of safe haven currencies lead to higher future volatility, positive jumps associated with the depreciation of other currencies lead to higher future volatility, especially during high volatility phases. We formally test whether the volatility dynamics are quantile dependent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. How raising interest rates can cause inflation and currency depreciation
- Author
-
Jón Helgi Egilsson
- Subjects
exchange rate ,exchange rate modeling ,interest rates ,interest rate differential ,ird ,monetary policy ,control rates ,cash-in-advance ,central bank policy ,uncovered interest rate parity ,uip ,carry trade ,factor price equalization ,Economic growth, development, planning ,HD72-88 ,Economic history and conditions ,HC10-1085 - Abstract
In this paper we derive a new model on exchange rate response to a lasting higher interest rate level. Contemporary models do not provide a convincing explanation for this relationship, but recent research suggests that models based on demand-pull effects to be somewhat confined to small funding cost increases. This would make cost-push effects more relevant when the interest rate differential (IRD) is larger and longer-lasting. The new model accounts for cost-push effects and suggests that a persistent higher IRD can evoke multiple responses, including currency depreciation, specialization, inflation, and wage drift. The model suggests that excessive long-lasting IRD can spark a chronic interaction between inflation and currency depreciation. Empirical data substantiate the prediction capability of the new model. We also demonstrate how the uncovered interest rate parity (UIP) principle is a special case, which can explain its empirical research anomalies, and when carry trade is a profitable investment strategy.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. The role of asymmetry and dynamics in carry trade and general financial markets.
- Author
-
Wu, Chang‐Che, Huang, MeiChi, and Wu, Chih‐Chiang
- Subjects
FINANCIAL markets ,GLOBAL Financial Crisis, 2008-2009 ,MARKET timing ,STOCK prices ,INVESTORS - Abstract
This study investigates asymmetric dependence and its dynamics across returns to carry trades, stocks, and bonds using a copula‐based model. We show evidence for a significant increase in carry trade‐stock dependence and substantially negative carry trade‐bond and stock‐bond comovements since the 2007–2008 global financial crisis. We also assess the out‐of‐sample predictability of dependence in the context of asset‐allocation strategies, and find that risk‐averse investors obtain significant economic values by incorporating asymmetry and dynamics into dependence timing, particularly in the 2007–2008 crisis. These findings provide new implications for asset‐allocation strategies and risk management during turbulent market phases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Carry Trade Returns and Segmented Risk Pricing.
- Author
-
Schulze, Gordon
- Subjects
STOCK exchanges ,RISK aversion ,MARKET pricing ,MARKET prices ,FOREIGN exchange ,INTEREST rates - Abstract
The returns to carry trades are controversially discussed. There seems to be no unifying risk-based explanation of currency returns and stock returns, while the countries' interest rate differential plays a leading part in the carry-trade performance. Therefore, this paper addresses carry-trade returns from a risk-pricing perspective and examines if these returns can be connected to cross-country differences in risk pricing in the interest-rate market compared to the stock market. Data from Thomson Reuters Datastream and Federal Reserve Economic Data covering Australia, Japan, New Zealand, Switzerland and the United States were analyzed based on GMM estimation. The results indicate significant and persistent cross-country differences in risk aversion in the interest-rate market compared to the implied risk aversion in the stock market. This may offer opportunities for risk arbitrage and, therefore, a risk pricing-related explanation of carry-trade returns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Conditional Risk Premia in Currency Markets and Other Asset Classes
- Author
-
Lettau, Martin, Maggiori, Matteo, and Weber, Michael
- Subjects
Carry Trade ,Currency Returns ,Downside Risk ,Exchange Rates ,UIP ,Conditional risk premia ,Cross Section of Equities and Commodities - Abstract
The downside risk CAPM (DR-CAPM) can price the cross section of currency returns. The market-beta differential between high and low interest rate currencies is higher conditional on bad market returns, when the market price of risk is also high, than it is conditional on good market returns. Correctly accounting for this variation is crucial for the empirical performance of the model. The DR-CAPM can jointly explainthe cross section of equity, commodity, sovereign bond and currency returns, thus offering a unified risk view of these asset classes. In contrast, popular models that have been developed for a specic asset class fail to jointly price other asset classes.
- Published
- 2013
26. THE YIELD OF THE CARRY TRADE STRATEGY
- Author
-
A. Yu. Mikhailov
- Subjects
strategy ,carry trade ,parity ,interest rates ,monetary policy ,optimal portfolio ,stock indexes ,yield ,Finance ,HG1-9999 - Abstract
The article analyzes the carry trade strategy in which, according to common definition, traders borrow a currency that has a low-interest rate and use the funds to buy a different currency that is paying a higher interest rate. The aim of this work is to form the optimal strategies and carry trade portfolio. The task of our study was to study the interdependence between the yield of the carry trade strategy and the USA stock market on the basis of a mathematical approach and offer a portfolio of currencies with the highest historical yield over the past five years. The author used the model of relative risk aversion. We analyzed data on exchange rates, forward premium and real exchange rates for the Eurozone, as well as for countries of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) such as Australia, Brazil, China, Japan, New Zealand, Russia, Switzerland, the United Kingdom and the United States of America. Carry trade’s yield is not tied to standard risk factors. Popular funding currency — the yen has experienced a strong jump of volatility as a result of the 2008–2009 crisis. A possible explanation for this reversal is investors’ appetite for risk. The author concluded that the most common carry trade strategies in the period from 2009 to 2014 were formed on the basis of two financing currencies (Japanese yen and the US dollar) and three investment currencies (Australian dollar, New Zealand dollar and Chinese yuan). After 2014, the US dollar ceases to be the funding currency, giving way to the Euro. The optimal carry trade strategy is borrowing in the currencies of developed countries (EUR, JPY) and investing in the currencies of energy producing countries (RUB, BRL). There is a negative relationship between the volume of transactions based on the carry trade strategy and the yield of shares in the financing country. There is also a significant link between the yield of the carry trade strategy and the profitability of the USA stock market.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Weaknesses of Strong Ruble
- Author
-
Y. M. Mirkin and I. V. Dobashina
- Subjects
carry trade ,central bank ,currency crisis ,economic growth ,financial policy ,overvalued currency ,russian ruble rate ,Competition ,HD41 ,Finance ,HG1-9999 - Abstract
The article describes the macroeconomic consequences of the overvalued ruble policy (1996-2010s). It explains the impact of carry trade on financial crises in 1998, 2008-2009, 2014. The five scenarios of future financial crises are discussing. Reveals the “formula” of New Course macroeconomic and financial policy that includes, as an element, a moderately weak ruble.
- Published
- 2018
28. ARA KAZANÇ TİCARETİNDEKİ (CARRY TADE) ÇÖZÜLMENİN ASİMETRİK ETKİLERİ: TÜRKİYE ÜZERİNE BİR UYGULAMA.
- Author
-
GACENER ATIŞ, Aydanur and ERER, Deniz
- Subjects
- *
INTEREST rates , *FOREIGN exchange , *GLOBAL Financial Crisis, 2008-2009 , *TURKISH lira , *PRICE inflation , *FOREIGN exchange rates - Abstract
Carry trade is a speculative financial transaction and a leveraged exchange rate position. Thus, a sudden unwinding in carry trade position leads to a sharp depreciates in the high-interest currency and to increase exchange rate volatility. It can cause global imbalances and financial crises and therefore it can ensue as a source of financial fragility and instability. In this study, we examined effects of unwinding of carry trade on financial variables in regimes when interest rate differential and TL/USD exchange rate volatility are high and low, over the period of January 2005-September 2017 in Turkey. From the results of this study, we concluded that a sudden unwinding of carry trade position led to decrease of interest rate and BİST 100 return and increase of inflation rate in regimes when interest rate differential is high and low. So-called unwinding led to depreciate Turkish Lira and decrease of BİST 100 return in regimes when exchange rate volatility is high and low. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. CARRY TRADE YATIRIM STRATEJİSİ VE TÜRKİYE'DE BELİRLEYİCİLERİ.
- Author
-
BİNGÖL, Nergis, PEHLİVAN, Ceren, and HAN, Ayşegül
- Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Financial Researches & Studies / Finansal Araştirmalar ve Çalişmalar Dergisi is the property of Marmara University, School of Banking & Insurance and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Stocks Turn Negative Despite Morning Surge—As Market Stays Choppy After Monday's Brutal Slide.
- Author
-
Saul, Derek
- Subjects
FINANCIAL crises ,STOCKS (Finance) ,MORNING - Abstract
After gaining 1% by midday, the S&P notched another day in the red. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
31. ARA KAZANÇ TĠCARETĠNĠN BELĠRLEYENLERĠ: TÜRKĠYE ÜZERĠNE BĠR UYGULAMA.
- Author
-
ATIġ, Aydanur GACENER and ERER, Deniz
- Subjects
NONLINEAR estimation ,FOREIGN exchange rates ,PRICE inflation ,RISK perception - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Financial Politic & Economic Reviews / Finans Politik & Ekonomik Yorumlar is the property of Journal of Financial Politic & Economic Reviews / Finans Politik & Ekomomik Yorumlar and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2020
32. Oil Prices, Exchange Rates and Interest Rates.
- Author
-
Kilian, Lutz and Xiaoqing Zhou
- Subjects
PETROLEUM sales & prices ,INTEREST rates ,FOREIGN exchange rates ,ECONOMIC shock ,EMPIRICAL research - Abstract
There has been much interest in the relationship between the price of crude oil, the value of the U.S. dollar, and the U.S. interest rate since the 1980s. For example, the sustained surge in the real price of oil in the 2000s is often attributed to the declining real value of the U.S. dollar as well as low U.S. real interest rates, along with a surge in global real economic activity. Quantifying these effects one at a time is difficult not only because of the close relationship between the interest rate and the exchange rate, but also because demand and supply shocks in the oil market in turn may affect the real value of the dollar and real interest rates. We propose a novel identification strategy for disentangling the causal effects of traditional oil demand and oil supply shocks from the effects of exogenous variation in the U.S. real interest rate and in the real value of the U.S. dollar. We empirically evaluate popular views about the role of exogenous real exchange rate shocks in driving the real price of oil, and we examine the extent to which shocks in the global oil market drive the U.S. real exchange rate and U.S. real interest rates. Our evidence for the first time provides direct empirical support for theoretical models of the link between these variables. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Carry trade y credit crunch en la economía española
- Author
-
Alonso Guinea, Fernando, Blázquez, Pablo, Alonso Guinea, Fernando, and Blázquez, Pablo
- Abstract
El trabajo presenta algunos factores que han causado la restricción crediticia a las empresas y al consumo durante la etapa de crisis que vive aún hoy la economía española. Analiza las claves que han desembocado en esta situación como son las políticas aplicadas antes y durante la crisis por los Bancos Centrales, la distribución sectorial del crédito y el uso que del mismo han hecho los bancos comerciales en sus políticas de riesgo y liquidez. Los datos analizados vinculan la situación a dos fenómenos que tienen una clara integración en la actual situación del sistema financiero en España: el “carry trade” o uso del crédito a los bancos en la adquisición de deuda pública ha llevado al “credit crunch” con niveles de crédito muy por debajo de los existentes en cualquier otro país de la OCDE resultado del comportamiento de la banca comercial en el mecanismo de transmisión de la política monetaria., This paper presents some factors which contribute and originate the current credit restrictions to companies and consumption during the crisis phase that have affected the Spanish economy is now experiencing. It analyzes key questions that lead to the current situation as policies applied by Central Banks before and during the crisis period, sectorial distribution of the credit, and performance of credit in commercial banks in their risk and liquidity policies. The quantitative data shows a clear link between two phenomena detected and integrated in the Spanish Financial System: the “carry trade” or the use of credit by the European Central Bank to buy great amounts of Public Debt caused the “credit crunch” with levels much lower than those existing in the other countries of OECD originated in base to the commercial banks behavior in their transmission role of the monetary policy., Instituto Complutense de Estudios Internacionales, TRUE, pub
- Published
- 2023
34. The Capital Control Effect On The Failure Of Covered Interest Parity In Asian Markets
- Author
-
Ge, Qing
- Subjects
Economics ,Capital Control ,Carry Trade ,China ,Covered Interest Parity ,NDF - Abstract
This dissertation investigates factors related to the failure of covered interest parity by focusing on seven Asian emerging economies where they have both onshore deliverable forward and offshore non-deliverable forward. It implements the deviation from covered interest parity (CID) to proxy the capital control risk as to the primary risk factor and other subsequent risk factors. Among these seven countries and three types of forward maturities, capital control has a positive effect on the carry trade return, especially the strategy using onshore deliverable forward. The results are relevant to those emerging countries as they manage their capital flow and protect currency crashes.The second part constructs an extended daily capital control index from Oct. 2010 to July 2019 and collect PBoC interventions for the same period to measure the failure of CID in China onshore and offshore markets. It finds that the level of CIDs of China FX markets is positively related to the capital control restrictions but not the government intervention. However, by applying an extended GARCH model, the volatilities of the CID are reduced by direct and indirect government interventions.In the last part, my coauthor Penghao Cheng and I implement a model to explore Chinese onshore and offshore financial markets and fill the gap of the term spread differential of money market and CIP violation of currency market spillover effects. The empirical test usesa new flexible econometric method - Bayesian local projections. This Bayesian method can sensibly reduce the impact of compounded biases over the horizons and effectively deal with model misspecifications.
- Published
- 2020
35. Econometric Analysis of Currency Carry Trade
- Author
-
Wang, Yu-Jen, Chung, Huimin, Mizrach, Bruce, Lee, Cheng-Few, editor, and Lee, John C., editor
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Puzzling Premiums on FX Markets: Carry Trade, Momentum, and Value Alone and Strategy Diversification.
- Author
-
Mikova, Evgeniya, Teplova, Tamara, and Munir, Qaiser
- Subjects
FOREIGN exchange market ,COMMERCE ,MONETARY unions ,EMERGING markets ,INVESTMENT policy - Abstract
We construct and compare the results of exploiting individual investment strategies: carry trade, momentum, and value and estimate the benefits from strategy diversification. Our analysis is based on the set of 10 major currencies and the expanded sample additionally including 16 emerging market currencies. We implement strategies in FX markets against the ruble instead of the US dollar, as is common in the currency literature. We find that the performance of strategies varies with the change of the ruble regime. We also provide proof that combining strategies, based on volatility, offers significant improvement in risk-adjusted returns compared to either of the two strategies independently or to benchmarks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Pricing Risks Across Currency Denominations.
- Author
-
Maurer, Thomas A., Tô, Thuy-Duong, and Tran, Ngoc-Khanh
- Subjects
ECONOMIC indicators ,MONEY ,FOREIGN exchange market ,MULTIPLE correspondence analysis (Statistics) ,SHARPE ratio - Abstract
We use principal component analysis on 55 bilateral exchange rates of 11 developed currencies to identify two important global risk sources in foreign exchange (FX) markets. The risk sources are related to Carry and Dollar but are not spanned by these factors. We estimate the market prices associated with the two risk sources in the cross-section of FX market returns and construct FX market-implied country-specific stochastic discount factors (SDFs). The SDF volatilities are related to interest rates and expected carry trade returns in the cross-section. The SDFs price international stock returns and are related to important financial stress indicators and macroeconomic fundamentals. The first principal risk is associated with the Treasury-EuroDollar (TED) spread, quantities measuring volatility, tail and contagion risks, and future economic growth. It earns a relatively small implied Sharpe ratio. The second principal risk is associated with the default and term spreads and quantities capturing volatility and illiquidity risks. It further correlates with future changes in the long-term interest rate and earns a large implied Sharpe ratio. This paper was accepted by Lauren Cohen, finance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Diversification effect of standard and optimized carry trades.
- Author
-
Reichenecker, Jurij-Andrei
- Subjects
CARRY trades (Foreign exchange) ,STATISTICAL evidence (Law) ,PORTFOLIO diversification ,MARKET volatility ,PORTFOLIO managers (Investments) - Abstract
Standard carry trades, which consist of purchasing high- and selling low-yield currencies, provide an economic diversification effect. However, the diversification effect is not robust, and is not borne out by much statistical evidence. We introduce optimized carry trades, which incorporate risk components such as currency volatility or currency skewness in the selection process. These optimized carry trades provide a robust economic diversification effect observed by a larger Sharpe ratio, a reduced portfolio volatility, a smaller drawdown, or a reduced tail risk with respect to a benchmark portfolio. Moreover, a significant improvement of the mean-efficient frontier is observable, with the result that minimum-variance and tangency portfolio are enhanced. The empirical results reveal that optimized carry trades have a larger diversification effect than standard carry trades and their modifications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The role of the enhanced carry to risk on currency policy: the Mexican Peso.
- Author
-
Fernández-Herraiz, Carlos, Prado-Domínguez, Antonio Javier, Pateiro-Rodríguez, Carlos, and García-Iglesias, Jesús M.
- Subjects
PESO (Mexican currency) ,CARRY trades (Foreign exchange) ,EMERGING markets ,BOX-Jenkins forecasting - Abstract
One of the most common measures of carry trade attractiveness is the carry-to-risk ratio. On analysing the speculative activity, this ratio presents two issues: First, emerging market currencies could merit a legitimate risk premium in a carry trade strategy due to the sovereign risks involved. In order to correct the measure, we include the credit risk in the measure using credit default swaps. Second, we gather more information about potential volatility asymmetries including a directional speculation indicator known as the risk reversal. We prove that the enhanced measure for the Mexican peso (MXN) is well represented by an ARIMA model with appropriate features since 2009. Due to the output of the analysis, we deduce that the Bank of Mexico might use this measure or a similar indicator, not only to understand the attractiveness of the carry trade strategy but to curb destabilizing carry trade activities. The case is compelling for the Mexican peso due to its dual role as emerging market currency and full convertible currency. We conclude that this institution may effectively manage the enhanced carry-to-risk measures in order to achieve financial stability and proper exchange credibility, and recognize its potential utility for other central banks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Currency strategies based on momentum, carry trade and skewness.
- Author
-
Jiang, Xue, Han, Liyan, and Yin, Libo
- Subjects
- *
SKEWNESS (Probability theory) , *PROFITABILITY , *CARRY trades (Foreign exchange) , *BRIBERY , *OVERLAPPING generations model (Economics) - Abstract
Abstract This paper documents that momentum, carry trade, and skewness strategies do not contain exactly the same information, which inspires us to construct a novel, triple-screen strategy and test its profitability. We first investigate the properties of payoffs to the above three currency speculation strategies. We then conduct double sorting and cross-sectional regression analyses to disentangle these strategies and find that they are not completely overlapping. Finally, we combine the momentum, carry trade, and skewness strategies to create a triple-screen strategy. The results show that triple-screen strategies generally perform better than single- and double-screen strategies. Our empirical findings are also robust to subsamples (advanced, emerging, non-Euro and Group of Twenty economies). Our research findings provide experimental investigation on the effectiveness of combining momentum, carry trade, and skewness strategies, as well as ways to bring more benefits to investors. Highlights • We construct a novel, triple-screen strategy and test its profitability. • Double sorting and cross-sectional regression analyses are conducted. • Three currency speculation strategies are not completely overlapping. • Triple-screen strategies generally perform better than single- and double-screen strategies. • Results are robust to subsamples (advanced, emerging, non-Euro and G20 economies). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. CARRY TRADE YATIRIMLARININ KAZANÇ VE RİSK UNSURLARINA DUYARLILIĞI: TÜRKİYE İÇİN ARDL SINIR TESTİ UYGULAMASI.
- Author
-
GÜLER, Aslı
- Subjects
INVESTMENTS ,FOREIGN investments ,INVESTMENT policy ,CAPITAL movements ,INTEREST rates - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Management & Economics Research is the property of Journal of Management & Economics Research and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. A Sharpe-ratio-based measure for currencies
- Author
-
Javier Prado-Dominguez and Carlos Fernández-Herráiz
- Subjects
Sharpe Ratio ,peso problem ,carry trade ,currency strategies. ,Political science ,Political institutions and public administration (General) ,JF20-2112 - Abstract
The Sharpe Ratio offers an excellent summary of the excess return required per unit of risk invested. This work presents an adaptation of the ex-ante Sharpe Ratio for currencies where we consider a random walk approach for the currency behavior and implied volatility as a proxy for market expectations of future realized volatility. The outcome of the proposed measure seems to gauge some information on the expected required return attached to the “peso problem”.
- Published
- 2015
43. It's Time to Short AMLO's Mexico.
- Author
-
O'Grady, Mary Anastasia
- Subjects
- *
LAW reform , *NEW democracies , *GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
The article argues that Mexico' President Andrés Manuel López Obrador's administration has exacerbated Mexico's economic challenges, leading to a weakened peso and increased fiscal deficit. Topics discussed include López Obrador's proposed constitutional reforms and their impact on investment, the deterioration of fiscal conditions, and the potential for further economic and legal instability.
- Published
- 2024
44. The global currency tango — The relationship between the carry trade, emerging/commodity currencies and risk.
- Author
-
Smit, Steven and Polakow, Daniel
- Subjects
- *
COMMERCIAL products , *FINANCIAL risk , *EMERGING markets , *CARRY trades (Foreign exchange) , *CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) - Abstract
This study has foci on the global drivers of currencies and their relationship to economic jurisdiction in the presence of global risk appetite. We focus on a comprehensive basket of global currencies, deriving three statistically motivated currency market factors. We cluster on these factor loadings and find three currency groupings - Developed/European, Emerging/Commodity as well as an Asian currency cluster. Constructing ‘risk states’ based on the VIX Volatility Index, we find that Developed/European and Emerging/Commodity cluster currencies are better explained by the first three principal components when in the ‘Low’ and ‘High’ risk states respectively. As previously corroborated in the literature, we find evidence that the second principal component is a ‘carry trade factor’. We detail that the impact of this factor on currencies in the Emerging/Commodity cluster is heightened (for both positive and negative changes) by ‘High’ risk states. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Uncovered Interest Rate Parity, Carry Trade, and Country Equity Return Differentials.
- Author
-
Kanchanapoom, Termkiat, Padungsaksawasdi, Chaiyuth, Chunhachinda, Pornchai, and de Boyrie, Maria E.
- Subjects
INTEREST rates ,RATE of return ,INVESTMENTS ,DISCOUNT prices ,MARKET volatility ,VOLATILITY (Securities) - Abstract
This paper applies a mixed effect model to investigate the relationship between international equity returns and forward discount sorted currency returns from three base currencies (i. e., US dollar, euro, and pound sterling). Empirical results using the portfolio approach show that high-interest rate currencies co-move positively while low-interest rate currencies co-move negatively, suggesting that foreign equity excess returns can help to explain investment in currency markets, providing a partial resolution to the uncovered interest parity conundrum. Furthermore, we show that global equity market returns, volatility, and liquidity correlate well with currency returns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Standard and optimized carry trades.
- Author
-
Reichenecker, Jurij‐Andrei
- Subjects
CARRY trades (Foreign exchange) ,FINANCIAL crises ,RISK-return relationships ,MARKET volatility ,STATISTICAL correlation - Abstract
Abstract: Drawdown periods of standard carry trades are primarily the result of losses in classic carry trade currencies. These periods coincide with an increased financial stress, such as the recent financial crisis. The introduced optimized carry trades employ a dynamic weighting scheme for currencies, which incorporates general risk components. Optimized carry trades are therefore less exposed to losses under financial stress, and provide an enhanced risk‐return profile over the entire and second half of the sample period and during periods of volatile markets. These results find robust statistical evidence. Furthermore, optimized carry trades have a lower correlation with traditional asset classes than standard carry trades. Traditional models of risk are less successful in explaining the returns of optimized carry trades. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Foreign Exchange Strategies Performance.
- Author
-
del Castillo Penna, Raúl Álvarez, Núñez Mora, José Antonio, and Mata Mata, Leovardo
- Subjects
FOREIGN exchange ,FOREIGN exchange market ,CARRY trades (Foreign exchange) ,MOMENTUM investing ,VALUE investing (Finance) ,TERMS & phrases - Abstract
Copyright of Mexican Journal of Economics & Finance / Revista Mexicana de Economia y Finanzas is the property of Instituto Mexicano de Ejecutivos de Finanzas and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Do precious and industrial metals act as hedges and safe havens for currency portfolios?
- Author
-
Sakemoto, Ryuta
- Abstract
This study explores whether metals act as hedges and safe havens for currency investing portfolios. Three widely used currency investment strategies: carry, momentum and value are adopted. The empirical results argue that gold and silver do exhibit hedge and safe haven properties for all three strategies. Silver works as a strong hedge during extreme market conditions. However, these hedge and safe haven properties became weaker after the year 2000. We also find that industrial metals do not work as either hedges or safe havens for carry portfolios. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Hypothesis Testing of The Unsecured Interest Rate Parity: the Case of USD/PLN and EUR/PLN in 2006–2010
- Author
-
Paweł Śliwiński
- Subjects
carry trade ,międzynarodowy efekt Fishera ,kursy walutowe ,Marketing. Distribution of products ,HF5410-5417.5 ,Finance ,HG1-9999 - Abstract
The aim of this article is to verify the research hypothesis that assumes the existence of profitable carry trade operations based on USD or EUR loans in Poland in the years 2006–2010. Summarizing the results of an empirical test should be noted that investors operating on the Polish money and currency markets could reach up substantial profits from carry trade operations. The achieved results therefore indicate that the International Fisher Effect is not a good tool for forecasting exchange rates in the short term. The results of the empirical test indicate that the decisive role in investors decisions was played by the expectations for the evolution of exchange rates in the future. Due to the unstable USD/PLN and EUR/PLN exchange rates it can therefore be concluded that (the not secured against currency risk) carry trade operations largely accounted for currency speculation.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Is Implied Taylor Rule Interest Rate Applicable as a Carry Trade Strategy?
- Author
-
Gokcen Ogruk
- Subjects
carry trade ,taylor rule fundamentals. ,Business ,HF5001-6182 ,Economics as a science ,HB71-74 - Abstract
This paper evaluates the performance of carry trade strategies with implied Taylor rule interest rate differentials and compares the performance statistics of them over the naive carry trade strategy with actual interest rates. Carry trade, a currency speculation strategy, between high-interest rate and low-interest rate currencies generates high payoff on average and has a possibility of crash risk. I argue that the crash risk is reduced with implied Taylor rule interest rate differentials as a trading strategy in Yen and Franc trades for the whole sample period. During the recent financial crisis, the carry trading strategies with Taylor rule perform best in terms of mean returns, risk adjusted returns and downside risk.
- Published
- 2014
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.