While I’m fondest of analyzing all currencies relative to the Dollar
(after all, it’s what I’m most familiar with and is involved in almost
half of all forex trades), sometimes its interesting to look at cross
rates.
Take the Pound/Euro, for example, arguably one of the most important
crosses, and one of a handful that often moves independently of the
Dollar. If you chart the performance of this pair over the last two
years, however, you can see the distinct lack of volatility. It has
fluctuated around an axis of 1.15 GBP/EUR, never straying more than 5%
in either direction. In fact, it’s sitting right at this level as I
compose this post.
Yesterday, I read some commentary by Boris Schlossberg (whom I interviewed in 2010),
Director of Currency Research at GFT. In the title (“Euro and Pound Go
Their Separate Ways”), he seemed to suggest that a big move was
imminent. Aside from noting that both currencies stand at crossroads,
he declined to offer more concrete guidance on the direction of the
potential breakout.
At the moment, the markets are gripped by risk aversion, caused by
the Mid East political turmoil and the Japanese natural disasters. Once
these events run their course and the accompanying market tension
subsides, investors will need something else to latch on to. Perhaps the
Bank of England (BoE) and European Central Bank (ECB) can fulfill this
function, since both are on the verge of hiking their respective
benchmark interest rates . Absent any other developments, the timing and
speed of such hikes will probably dictate not only how these
currencies perform against each other, but also how they perform
against the Dollar.
Despite the numerous indications that both have given to the
contrary, I don’t think either Central Bank is in a hurry to raise
interest rates. Economic growth remains poor, unemployment is high, and
inflation is still moderate. Neither is yet at the stage where it can
unwind the monetary easing that it put in place at the height of the
financial crisis. Moreover, both are wary about the potential impact of
rate hikes on their respective currencies (a concern that I am
ironically fomenting with this post).
It looks like the BoE will be the first to act.
Combined with high energy prices, the bank’s easy monetary policy is
putting extraordinary pressure on prices, and it now appears that
inflation could reach 5% in 2011. In addition, the BoE voted 6-3 at its
last meeting in favor of tightening, which means that a hike probably
isn’t too far off. On the other hand, the ECB is talking tough,
but it still doesn’t have much of an impetus to act. Inflation is
moderate, and besides, the region’s banks remain too dependent on ECB
cash for it to serious contemplate being aggressive.
Either way, the interest rate differential probably won’t be great
enough to encourage any short-term speculation between the two
currencies. In addition, I think investors will continue to look to the
Yen and the Dollar for guidance, and we won’t see any significant
movement in either direction. [The chart below is based on benchmark
lending rates and isn't necessarily applicable for retail forex
trading].
This would create two opportunities for investors: Options traders should consider a long straddle,
which involves selling a put and call at the same strike price
(perhaps 1.15), pocketing the premiums, and praying that the rate
doesn’t fluctuate much (since they would be exposed to unlimited risk).
In the future, carry traders can also profit from the lack of
volatility through a carry trading strategy, perhaps amplified by a
little leverage. Be careful, however. Since interest rate differentials
are currently so small (The current LIBOR rate disparity is a mere
.05%!) and probably won’t widen to more than 1% over the next twelve
months, any profits from interest could easily be wiped out by even the
smallest adverse exchange rate movements.
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