February 05, 2010
Carry trade isn’t magic for Lord Adair
Trevor Carr
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Were becoming used to banker-bashing, but in Davos last week Financial Services Authority chairman Adair Turner indulged in a little FX-bashing. He said: If I could wave a magic wand here and greatly reduce the carry trade, Im pretty certain the world would be a better place.
Theres many bankers I know who, if they had a magic wand, would wave it to make his Lordship disappear right now. But lets not dwell on wishes.
Adair went on to say: Its a form of speculative activity where you cant work out what the value is to the real economy.
The real economy there was a lot of talk of it at theWorld Economic Forum is a figure of speech used to separate the world of finance from the real world of Joe Public, the voter. Or, as the politicians and regulators will have it, respectively the perpetrators and the victims of the global economic mess.
Zhu Min of the Peoples Bank of China was also concerned about the carry trade build-up. To me, the big risk this year is the dollar carry trade. It is a massive issue estimates are that it is $1,500 billion which is much bigger than Japans carry trade.
Carry trade strategies will inevitably exist when currencies are floating and freely convertible. And for investors looking at near-zero yields, they seem a possible means of positive returns. The carry trade cant be magicked away. It can be made less viable however, at least for institutional players, by regulatory change.
Unilateral change will not be the way forward, despite Obamas rhetoric (by the way, has anybody pointed out the size of US taxpayer losses that are due to the Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac bailouts?). Any new, sustainable, regulatory regime will proceed from the recommendations of the G20s Financial Stability Board, on which Turner sits. However, the FSB looks unlikely to report before the end of the year. By which time the Fed will probably have started to hike rates and dollar carry positions will have begun to be unwound.
Hopefully the unwind will not be as savage as the PBoC fears. Whether or not peak exposure got anywhere near Zhu Mins extraordinary estimate is hard to say, but there are grounds for thinking that it has come and gone. Since the beginning of December the USD index is up 6% and the dollar is 3% stronger against AUD. And this weeks unexpected rate pause by the Reserve Bank of Australia has been a reminder that the carry trade, like any trade, is not a dead cert.
Currency pairs: Turner, Potter