Reading 18 Currency Management: An Introduction Flashcards
Spot Markets
- Most people think only of spot transactions when they think of the foreign exchange market, but in fact the spot market accounts for less than 40% of the average daily turnover in currencies.1 Although cross-border business may be transacted in the spot market (making and receiving foreign currency payments), the risk management of these flows takes place in FX derivatives markets (i.e., using forwards, FX swaps, and currency options).
- How the professional FX market quotes exchange rates - generally, there is a hierarchy as to which currency will be quoted as the base currency in any given P/B currency pair:
- Currency pairs involving the EUR will use the EUR as the base currency (for example, GBP/EUR).
- Currency pairs involving the GBP, other than those involving the EUR, will use the GBP as the base currency (for example, CHF/GBP).
- Currency pairs involving either the AUD or NZD, other than those involving either the EUR or GBP, will use these currencies as the base currency (for example, USD/AUD and NZD/AUD). The market convention between these two currencies is for a NZD/AUD quote.
- All other currency quotes involving the USD will use USD as the base currency (for example, MXN/USD).
- Another convention used in professional FX markets is that most spot currency quotes are priced out to four decimal places: for example, a typical USD/EUR quote would be 1.3500 and not 1.35. The price point at the fourth decimal place is commonly referred to as a “pip.”Professional FX traders also refer to what is called the “big figure” or the “handle,” which is the integer to the left side of the decimal place as well as the first two decimal places of the quote. For example, for a USD/EUR quote of 1.3568, 1.35 is the handle and there are 68 pips.
- There are exceptions to this four decimal place rule. First, forward quotes—discussed later—will often be quoted out to five and sometimes six decimal places. Second, because of the relative magnitude of some currency values, some currency quotes will only be quoted out to two decimal places. For example, because it takes many Japanese yen to buy one US dollar, the typical spot quote for JPY/USD is priced out to only two decimal places (for example, 86.35 and not 86.3500).
- The spot exchange rate is usually for settlement on the second business day after the trade date, referred to as T + 2 settlement.The bid price is the price, defined in terms of the price currency, at which the counterparty providing a two-sided price quote is willing to buy one unit of the base currency. Similarly, offer price is the price, in terms of the price currency, at which that counterparty is willing to sell one unit of the base currency. For example, given a price request from a client, a dealer might quote a two-sided price on the spot USD/EUR exchange rate of 1.3648/1.3652.
Forward Markets
- Forward contracts are agreements to exchange one currency for another on a future date at an exchange rate agreed on today. In contrast to spot rates, forward contracts are any exchange rate transactions that occur with settlement longer than the usual T + 2 settlement for spot delivery.
- In professional FX markets, forward exchange rates are typically quoted in terms of “points.” The points on a forward rate quote are simply the difference between the forward exchange rate quote and the spot exchange rate quote; that is, the forward premium or discount, with the points scaled so that they can be related to the last decimal place in the spot quote. Forward points are adjustments to the spot price of the base currency, using our standard price/base (P/B) currency notation.
- Although there is no cash flow on a forward contract until settlement date, it is often useful to do a mark-to-market valuation on a forward position before then to (1) judge the effectiveness of a hedge based on forward contracts (i.e., by comparing the change in the mark-to-market of the underlying asset with the change in the mark-to-market of the forward), and (2) to measure the profitability of speculative currency positions at points before contract maturity.
- As with other financial instruments, the mark-to-market value of forward contracts reflects the profit (or loss) that would be realized from closing out the position at current market prices. To close out a forward position, it must be offset with an equal and opposite forward position using the spot exchange rate and forward points available in the market when the offsetting position is created. When a forward contract is initiated, the forward rate is such that no cash changes hands (i.e., the mark-to-market value of the contract at initiation is zero). From that moment onward, however, the mark-to-market value of the forward contract will change as the spot exchange rate changes as well as when interest rates change in either of the two currencies.
- The all-in forward rate is simply the sum of the spot rate and the forward points, appropriately scaled to size.
The process for marking-to-market a forward position
Consider an example.
Suppose that a market participant bought GBP10,000,000 for delivery against the AUD in six months at an “all-in” forward rate of 1.6100 AUD/GBP. (The all-in forward rate is simply the sum of the spot rate and the forward points, appropriately scaled to size.) Three months later, the market participant wants to close out this forward contract. To do that would require selling GBP10,000,000 three months forward using the AUD/GBP spot exchange rate and forward points in effect at that time. Assume the bid–offer for spot and forward points three months prior to the settlement date are as follows:
Spot rate (AUD/GBP) 1.6210/1.6215 Three-month points 130/140
To sell GBP (the base currency in the AUD/GBP quote) means calculating the bid side of the market. Hence, the appropriate all-in three-month forward rate to use is
1.6210 + 130/10,000 = 1.6340
Thus, the market participant originally bought GBP10,000,000 at an AUD/GBP rate of 1.6100 and subsequently sold them at a rate of 1.6340. These GBP amounts will net to zero at settlement date (GBP10 million both bought and sold), but the AUD amounts will not net to zero because the forward rate has changed. The AUD cash flow at settlement date will be equal to
(1.6340 – 1.6100) × 10,000,000 = AUD240,000
This amount is a cash inflow because the market participant was long the GBP with the original forward position and the GBP subsequently appreciated (the AUD/GBP rate increased).
This cash flow is paid at settlement day, which is still three months away. To calculate the mark-to-market value on the dealer’s position, this cash flow must be discounted to the present. The present value of this amount is found by discounting the settlement day cash flow by the three-month discount rate. Because it is an AUD amount, the three-month AUD discount rate is used. If Libor is used and the three-month AUD Libor is 4.80% (annualized), the present value of this future AUD cash flow is then
AUD 240,000 / (1+0.048[90/360])=AUD 237,154
This is the mark-to-market value of the original long GBP10 million six-month forward contract when it is closed out three months prior to settlement.
The process for marking-to-market a forward position is relatively straightforward:
- Create an equal and offsetting forward position to the original forward position. (In the example earlier, the market participant is long GBP10 million forward, so the offsetting forward contract would be to sell GBP10 million.)
- Determine the appropriate all-in forward rate for this new, offsetting forward position. If the base currency of the exchange rate quote is being sold (bought), then use the bid (offer) side of the market.
- Calculate the cash flow at settlement day. This calculation will be based on the original contract size times the difference between the original forward rate and the rate calculated in Step 2. If the currency the market participant was originally long (short) subsequently appreciated (depreciated), then there will be a cash inflow. Otherwise, there will be a cash outflow. (In the earlier example, the market participant was long the GBP and it subsequently appreciated; this appreciation led to a cash inflow at the settlement day.)
- Calculate the present value of this cash flow at the future settlement date. The currency of the cash flow and the discount rate must match (In the example earlier, the cash flow at the settlement date is in AUD, so an AUD Libor rate is used to calculate the present value.)
FX Swap Markets
- An FX swap transaction consists of offsetting and simultaneous spot and forward transactions, in which the base currency is being bought (sold) spot and sold (bought) forward. These two transactions are often referred to as the “legs” of the swap. The two legs of the swap can either be of equal size (a “matched” swap) or one can be larger than the other (a “mismatched” swap). FX swaps are distinct from currency swaps. Similar to currency swaps, FX swaps involve an exchange of principal amounts in different currencies at swap initiation that is reversed at swap maturity. Unlike currency swaps, FX swaps have no interim interest payments and are nearly always of much shorter term than currency swaps.
- FX swaps are important for managing currency risk because they are used to “roll” forward contracts forward as they mature.
- A hedge ratio is the ratio of the nominal value of the derivatives contract used as a hedge to the market value of the hedged asset.
Currency Options
- “Exotic” options have a variety of features that make them exceptionally flexible risk management tools, compared with vanilla options.
- Although daily turnover in FX options market is small in relative terms compared with the overall daily flow in global spot currency markets, because the overall currency market is so large, the absolute size of the FX options market is still very considerable.
Return Decomposition
- A domestic asset is an asset that trades in the investor’s domestic currency (or home currency).
- Foreign assets are assets denominated in currencies other than the investor’s home currency.
- The return on a foreign asset will be affected by exchange rate movements in the home currency against the** foreign currency**.
- The return of the foreign asset measured in foreign-currency terms is known as the** foreign-currency return**.
- The domestic-currency return on a foreign asset will reflect both the foreign-currency return on that asset as well as percentage movements in the spot exchange rate between the home and foreign currencies. The domestic-currency return is multiplicative with respect to these two factors:
RDC = (1 + RFC)(1 + RFX) – 1
where RDC is the domestic-currency return (in percent), RFC is the foreign-currency return, and RFX is the percentage change of the foreign currency against the domestic currency. Formula for domestic-currency returns (RDC) requires that the domestic currency be the price currency
- Equation above hides a subtlety that must be recognized. The term RFX is defined as the percentage change in the foreign currency against the domestic currency. However, this change is not always the same thing as the percentage change in the spot rate using market standard P/B quotes.
- This distinction is important because which currency is considered the domestic currency and whether it is either the base or the price currency in the market standard P/B quote will lead to completely different mathematical results. This happens in two ways. First, it determines thesign, or direction, of the exchange rate appreciation.
- Another way in which quoting conventions affect mathematical results involves the fact that the foreign exchange return, RFX in Equation above, is calculated with the investor’s domestic currency as the price currency. Even if one gets the sign, or direction, of change right, it is not necessarily the case that one can simply “flip the sign” of the percentage change in market standard P/B to get the right answer.
- To be accurate, the foreign exchange calculation in Equation above must be quoted so that the “domestic” currency is always the price currency. One must be careful when using quote conventions and make adjustments as necessary to calculate the domestic-currency return properly.
- More generally, the domestic-currency return on a portfolio of multiple foreign assets will be equal to:
RDC=∑i=1nωi(1+RFC,i)(1+RFX,i)−1
where RFC,i is the foreign-currency return on the i-th foreign asset, RFX,i is the appreciation of the i-th foreign currency against the domestic currency, and ωi are the portfolio weights of the foreign-currency assets (defined as the percentage of the aggregate domestic-currency value of the portfolio) and ∑i=1nωi = 1. (Note that if short selling is allowed in the portfolio, some of the ωi can be less than zero.) Again, it is important that the exchange rate notation in this expression (used to calculate RFX,i) must be consistently defined with the domestic currency as the price currency.
Volatility Decomposition
σ2(RDC) ≈ σ2(RFC) + σ2(RFX) + 2σ(RFC)σ(RFX)ρ(RFC,RFX)
σ2(ω1R1+ω2R2)≈ω21σ2(R1)+ω22σ2(R2)+2ω1ω2σ(R1)σ(R2)ρ(R1,R2)
where Ri is the domestic-currency return of the i-th foreign-currency asset.
Currency Management: Strategic Decisions
- One camp of thought holds that in the long run currency effects cancel out to zero as exchange rates revert to historical means or their fundamental values. Moreover, an efficient currency market is a zero-sum game (currency “A” cannot appreciate against currency “B” without currency “B” depreciating against currency “A”), so there should not be any long-run gains overall to speculating in currencies, especially after netting out management and transaction costs. Therefore, both currency hedging and actively trading currencies represent a cost to a portfolio with little prospect of consistently positive active returns.
- At the other extreme, another camp of thought notes that currency movements can have a dramatic impact on short-run returns and return volatility and holds that there are pricing inefficiencies in currency markets.
The Investment Policy Statement
The IPS sets the guiding parameters within which more specific portfolio management policies are set, including the target asset mix; whether and to what extent leverage, short positions, and derivatives can be used; and how actively the portfolio will be allowed to trade its various risk exposures.
For most portfolios, currency management can be considered a sub-set of these more specific portfolio management policies within the IPS. The currency risk management policy will usually address such issues as the
- target proportion of currency exposure to be passively hedged;
- latitude for active currency management around this target;
- frequency of hedge rebalancing;
- currency hedge performance benchmark to be used; and
- hedging tools permitted (types of forward and option contracts, etc.).
The Portfolio Optimization Problem
Many portfolio managers handle asset allocation with currency risk as a two-step process:
- portfolio optimization over fully hedged returns; and
- selection of active currency exposure, if any.
The portfolio manager will choose the exposures to the foreign-currency assets first, and then decide on the appropriate currency exposures afterward (i.e., decide whether to relax the full currency hedge). These decisions are made to simplify the portfolio construction process.
Choice of Currency Exposures: Diversification Considerations
- Many investment practitioners believe that in the long run, adding unhedged foreign-currency exposure to a portfolio does not affect expected long-run portfolio returns; hence in the long run, it would not matter if the portfolio was hedged.
- an investor (IPS) with a very long investment horizon and few immediate liquidity needs—which could potentially require the liquidation of foreign-currency assets at disadvantageous exchange rates—might choose to forgo currency hedging and its associated costs. Logically, this would require a portfolio benchmark index that is also unhedged against currency risk.
- Diversification considerations will also depend on the asset composition of the foreign-currency asset portfolio. The reason is because the foreign-currency asset returns (RFC) of different asset classes have different correlation patterns with foreign-currency returns (RFX).
- It is often asserted that the correlation between foreign-currency returns and foreign-currency asset returns tends to be greater for fixed-income portfolios than for equity portfolios. This assertion makes intuitive sense: both bonds and currencies react strongly to movements in interest rates, whereas equities respond more to expected earnings. As a result, the implication is that currency exposures provide little diversification benefit to fixed-income portfolios and that the currency risk should be hedged.
- The hedge ratio is defined as the ratio of the nominal value of the hedge to the market value of the underlying.
- Optimal hedge ratio also seems to depend on market conditions and longer-term trends in currency pairs.
- Actual hedge ratios vary widely in practice among different investors. Nonetheless, it is still more likely to see currency hedging for fixed-income portfolios rather than equity portfolios, although actual hedge ratios will often vary between individual managers.
Passive Hedging
- Passive hedging is a rules-based approach that removes almost all discretion from the portfolio manager, regardless of the manager’s market opinion on future movements in exchange rates or other financial prices.
- Active currency management—taking positional views on future exchange rate movements—is viewed as being incapable of consistently adding incremental return to the portfolio.
Discretionary Hedging
This approach is similar to passive hedging in that there is a “neutral” benchmark portfolio against which actual portfolio performance will be measured. However, in contrast to a strictly rules-based approach, the portfolio manager now has some limited discretion on how far to allow actual portfolio risk exposures to vary from the neutral position. Usually this discretion is defined in terms of percentage of foreign-currency market value (the portfolio’s currency exposures are allowed to vary plus or minus x% from the benchmark).
Choice of Currency Exposures: Cost Considerations
Optimal hedging decisions will need to balance the benefits of hedging against these costs.
Hedging costs come mainly in two forms: trading costs and opportunity costs.
The most immediate costs of hedging involve trading expenses, and these come in several forms:
- Trading involves dealing on the bid–offer spread offered by banks. Their profit margin is based on these spreads, and the more the client trades and “pays away the spread,” the more profit is generated by the dealer. Maintaining a 100% hedge and rebalancing frequently with every minor change in market conditions would be expensive.
- Some hedges involve currency options; a long position in currency options requires the payment of up-front premiums. If the options expire out of the money (OTM), this cost is unrecoverable.
- Although forward contracts do not require the payment of up-front premiums, they do eventually mature and have to be “rolled” forward with an FX swap transaction to maintain the hedge. Rolling hedges will typically generate cash inflows or outflows. These cash flows will have to be monitored, and as necessary, cash will have to be raised to settle hedging transactions. In other words, even though the currency hedge may reduce the volatility of the domestic mark-to-market value of the foreign-currency asset portfolio, it will typicallyincrease the volatility in the organization’s cash accounts. Managing these cash flow costs can accumulate to become a significant portion of the portfolio’s value, and they become more expensive (for cash outflows) the higher interest rates go.
- One of the most important trading costs is the need to maintain an administrative infrastructure for trading. Front-, middle-, and back-office operations will have to be set up, staffed with trained personnel, and provided with specialized technology systems. Settlement of foreign exchange transactions in a variety of currencies means having to maintain cash accounts in these currencies to make and receive these foreign-currency payments. Together all of these various overhead costs can form a significant portion of the overall costs of currency trading.
A second form of costs associated with hedging are the opportunity cost of the hedge. To be 100% hedged is to forgo any possibility of favorable currency rate moves.
- Opportunity costs lead to another motivation for having a strategic hedge ratio of less than 100%: regret minimization.
- Confronted with this ex ante dilemma of whether to hedge, many portfolio managers decide simply to “split the difference” and have a 50% hedge ratio (or some other rule-of-thumb number).
- The portfolio manager (and IPS) would likely not try to hedge every minor, daily change in exchange rates or asset values, but only the larger adverse movements that can materially affect the overall domestic-currency returns (RDC) of the foreign-currency asset portfolio. The portfolio manager will need to balance the benefits and costs of hedging in determining both strategic positioning of the portfolio as well as any latitude for active currency management. However, around whatever strategic positioning decision taken by the IPS in terms of the benchmark level of currency exposure, hedging cost considerations alone will often dictate arange of permissible exposures instead of a single point. (This discretionary range is similar to the deductible in an insurance policy.)
Active Currency Management
- For all forms of active management (i.e., having the discretion to express directional market views), there is no allowance for unlimited speculation; there are risk management systems in place for even the most speculative investment vehicles, such as hedge funds. These controls are designed to prevent traders from taking unusually large currency exposures and risking the solvency of the firm or fund.
- The primary duty of the discretionary hedger is to protect the portfolio from currency risk. As a secondary goal, within limited bounds, there is some scope for directional opinion in an attempt to enhance overall portfolio returns. In contrast, the active currency manager is supposed to take currency risks and manage them for profit. The primary goal is to add alpha to the portfolio through successful trading.
Currency Overlay
Active currency management is often associated with what are called** currency overlay programs**, although this term is used differently by different sources.
- In the most limited sense of the term, currency overlay simply means that the portfolio manager has outsourced managing currency exposures to a firm specializing in FX management.
- A broader view of currency overlay allows the externally hired currency overlay manager to take directional views on future currency movements (again, with the caveat that these be kept within predefined bounds).
- In contrast, the concept of foreign exchange as an asset class does not restrict the currency overlay manager, who is free to take FX exposures in any currency pair where there is value-added to be harvested, regardless of the underlying portfolio. In this sense, the currency overlay manager is very similar to an FX-based hedge fund.
Adding this form of currency overlay to the portfolio (FX as an asset class) is similar in principle to adding any type of alternative asset class, such as private equity funds or farmland. In each case, the goal is the search for alpha. But to be most effective in adding value to the portfolio, the currency overlay program should add incremental returns (alpha) and/or greater diversification opportunities to improve the portfolio’s risk–return profile. To do this, the currency alpha mandate should have minimum correlation with both the major asset classes and the other alpha sources in the portfolio.
Within the overall portfolio allocation to “currency as an alternative asset class”, it may be beneficial to diversify across a range of active management styles, either by engaging several currency overlay managers with different styles or by applying a fund-of-funds approach, in which the hiring and management of individual currency overlay managers is delegated to a specialized external investment vehicle.