The only thing predictable about currencies these days is that they
will remain unpredictable. Forgive me for speaking in cliches, but when
you consider that the last twelve months have seen both record rises and
record falls, I think a cliche might be justified in this case. We’ve
seen the Dollar soar, only to collapse again. On the other side, we’ve
seen the bottom fall out from emerging market currencies, before rising
20-30% in a matter of weeks.
Volatility levels have certainly declined (see Chart below) from the
record highs of October 2008, when Lehman Brothers collapsed. At the
same time, the oft-cited VIX index remains well above its average over
the last decade. This suggests that while investors may have been lulled
into a relative sense of security, serious doubts remain.
If
the current rally is to be seen as “legitimate,” then perhaps the worst
of the 2008-2009 recession is truly behind us, and the global financial
system has been given a reprieve from a meltdown. The concern going
forward then will naturally shift past the steps that governments and
Central Banks are taking to fight the crisis, towards the long-term
economic impact of those measures.
Jim Rogers, a famous and perennially outspoken investor, is now
sounding alarm bells over the possibility of “meltdown” in currency
markets, due to inflation and currency debasement that he views as an
inherent byproduct of quantitative easing and deficit spending.
Most of the attention is being focused on the US, whose stimulus and
monetary programs are probably larger than all other economies in the
world, combined. Offers one analyst, “We keep very low U.S. Dollar exposures
because we think a further devaluation of the greenback is imminent,
and we see a structural weakness for at least a number of years.”
Meanwhile, there is speculation that the US could soon receive a ratings
downgrade, following a similar threat by S&P directed towards
Britain. But this remains highly unlikely.
The problem that Rogers (and all other investors who are worried
about currency debasement) faces is how to construct a viable strategy
to protect yourself and/or exploit such an outcome. Rogers himself has
admitted, “At the moment I have virtually no hedges…I’m
trying to figure out what to do there.” The difficulty can be found in
the inherent nature of currencies, whose values are derived relative to
other currencies. While you can short the entire stock market or the
entire bond market (via market indexes), you can’t short all currencies
simultaneously- at least not yet.
Instead, you can pick one currency or a basket of currencies, that
you believed is best protected from currency collapse and buy it against
threatened currencies. But how do you deal with an environment when all
currencies appears equally questionable- when all governments all
loosening monetary policy and risking inflation? Really, the only answer
is to invest in commodities that you think represent good stores of
value, such as oil or gold, or the currencies that benefit when prices
of such commodities are high. Naturally, the relationship between
commodities and currencies is not cut-and-dried, and if the currency
system were indeed beset by meltdown, it’s not clear to me that
commodities would hold their value. But that’s fodder for another post…
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