Unwinding
the Carry Trade:
And the Jump in the U.S. Dollar
Is
this dollar rally doomed?
Chairman
Greenspan has seen what he wanted- some de-gearing in the global
financial system over the past few days and weeks. But this "healthy"
development may be setting the stage for a much weaker Dollar and
more volatility later this year.
The
Fed Chairman has been concerned about the number of Hedge Funds
and other financial institutions involved in the carry trade. That
is funds who buy assets with leverage, seeking an expected yield
higher than their cheap short term dollar borrowings. Hedge Funds
and others have loaded up on Corporate Bonds, emerging market debt,
and junk bonds of various currencies, all financed with dollar debt
at 3.0% or less, assuming a short maturity. The gearing of assets
including foreign securities, which yield more than the dollar borrowings
is common. And falls in the dollar since 2002 have made these cross-currency
trades profitable.
Carry
trades were particularly helpful last year, allowing many hedge
funds to generate a positive return in 2004, a year which otherwise
had little to offer in equity markets until the late stock rally,
which came after the November election.
Unfortunately,
this year the carry trades have not gone well. The dollar has rallied
and the result is that hedge fund returns have suffered. Just look
at this Hedge Fund index from S&P...
___________________________________________________________

Since Dec.2004 and again since late March 2005, the
Hedge Funds in this index have done badly. The Hedge Fund index
is now lagging far behind the S&P 500 (SPX), and the average
fund in the index is now off about 15% from its early December high.
What is troubing these funds, and what have they lagged so much?
Significantly,
these drops in performance have shown some correlation with periods
of Dollar strength.

The
blue line that I have added above shows the movements in the Euro
(XEU), and these also correlate well with the index, particularly
the spikes and drops in late Dec.2004 and in March 2005. What's
going on here? Why are these movements correlated? Unfortunately,
I do not have the composition of the S&P index for Hedge Funds
(xx:1609730 in my chart, as charted by BigCharts.com.)
But what I do know is that many funds are using alot of dollar debt
to finance assets, including those priced in Euros and other currencies.
Thus, since they are borrowing in dollars, they tend to benefit
from a drop in the dollar. Or to put it anoter way, a rally in non-dollar
currencies helps their asset values grow faster than their debt.
The
markets have continued to be treacherous. Last
week, we saw the reversals related to the GM and Ford trades, where
alot of Hedge funds got it wrong. I am hearing from my friends invested
in the Hedge Fund sector that performance in March and April was
bad, with many funds showing a negative return, and now May looks
worse still. Is it any surprise that alot of funds are getting hit
with redemptions?
Here's
what Sunday's Times had to say: "GLG, a hedge fund started
in 1995 by a group of former Goldman Sachs bankers, has in recent
weeks had demands for more than $500m (£270m) from investors
wanting to pull out of its $4 billion market-neutral fund. The predicament
of GLG, the biggest group in Europe, with $13 billion under management,
highlights the stress being felt at many hedge funds in Europe and
America after four months of deteriorating results."
( Timesonline
article of May 15, 2005 )
So
how does this effect the Dollar and commodity prices?
Well think of many of those Hedge fund assets: US Corporate bonds,
and more interestingly, foreign currency denominated debt, emerging
market bonds, and commodities. Many are denominated in currencies
other than US dollar. Funds have been financing those non-dollar
assets with cheap dollar debt, hoping for a "double gain":
a yield pick up (when the assets they are holding assets have a
return in excess of the low dollar borrowing costs.) Last year,
when the dollar was weak, there was a nice bonus, a currency gain
as the dollar fell. But in 2005, the dollar has stopped falling.
Then,
last week there was a stronger dollar at the same time as many big
fund experienced losses on debt holdings in GM/Ford. HF risk managers
must have called a halt to the losses, as their risk limits were
hit. Traders at the funds were told to reduce gearing. Last week,
we heard there was a wave of selling of all kinds of assets, particularly
GM and Ford debt. There were fears that Hedge Funds were going to
go down, and so a massive global degearing happened. Assets of various
currencies were dumped, and alot of the cash raised went to repay
the short term debt. Where assets were in other currencies, a currency
transaction was needed. Cash from sale of assets of other currencies
was converted into US dollars, and the dollar debt was repaid. Result:
the total size of the global carry trade has been reduced, and all
that liquidation helped the dollar as money was converted and dollar
denominated borrowings were retired.
Once
the dollar has gone far enough, and the current wave of degearing
is complete, the pressure on the funds will ease, and they will
again be ready to return to the carry trade. When that happens in
the next few days or weeks, I predict that, the dollar will renew
its slide. And if that re-gearing happens to comes just as the Chinese
begin to revalue their currency, the slide may be sharp indeed.
Watch
for it. We may be in for some very volatile times.
17.May
2005 by "Dr.Bubb"
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