Currency Funds Crushed on Dearth of Market Trends (Update3)
By Ye Xie and Liz Capo McCormick
July 6 (Bloomberg) -- FX Concepts Inc., the world’s largest
currency hedge fund, says it lost 5.4 percent in this year’s
first five months. John W. Henry & Co.’s foreign-exchange fund
told investors it lost 2 percent, after 2008’s 76 percent gain,
the best since its 1986 launching.
Both use computer models to spot currency trends and, along
with other momentum chasers, are getting hammered by this year’s
lack of clear direction as the markets are pulled in opposing
directions. Deflationary pressure from the first global
recession since World War II is being countered by the
inflationary forces of record stimulus spending and currency
printing across the globe.
The ICE’s Dollar Index shows the U.S. currency fell 1.4
percent against a basket of six major currencies in this year’s
first half, the smallest two-quarter change since 2006. Of four
currency trading styles simulated by Royal Bank of Scotland
Group Plc indexes, trend-following is the year’s only loser,
down 4.8 percent after also underperforming in June. In 2008,
the tactic gained 9.9 percent, its best in five years.
“I am not trying to make any excuse, but certainly it has
been difficult,” said John Taylor, chairman of New York-based
FX Concepts, which manages about $12 billion. “Unfortunately,
there’s lack of consistence of what’s happening. I am wondering
how stupid the market can be for how long.”
‘Extremely Weak’
Deutsche Bank AG, which Euromoney Institutional Investor
Plc ranks as last year’s biggest foreign-exchange trader,
predicted in April that “extremely weak trends” among Group of
10 currencies in the previous six months “augers strong trends
in the coming six months.”
Yet the RBS’s trend index’s 11.3 percent gain the following
month, its best on record, was followed by a 1.3 percent drop in
June. The Dollar Index -- which tracks the greenback against
euros, yen, pounds, Canadian dollars, Swedish krona and Swiss
francs -- has traded within 3 percent of its June 5 level for
the past four weeks, the smallest such variation since July
2008. It rallied 8 percent in the first two months, only to
decline 9 percent in the past four. The Dollar Index rose 0.3
percent today to 80.652 as of 10:44 a.m. in New York.
So-called implied volatility on options for major exchange
rates is down by half from the record 26.55 percent level it
reached on Oct. 24, data compiled by New York-based JPMorgan
Chase & Co. show.
Losing Streak
The currency fund of John W. Henry & Co., founded by and
named for the owner of the Boston Red Sox baseball team, had a
three-year losing streak from 2005 to 2007 as currency
volatility dropped to record lows, leaving little room to profit
from moves up or down.
It roared back last year along with volatility, gaining 33
percent in October by betting on the dollar and the yen
strengthening as the U.S. mortgage market meltdown prompted
traders to abandon higher-risk assets and pay back loans taken
out in the two currencies.
This year, as last year’s trend evaporated and volatility
plummeted, the fund lost money in the first three months,
dropping 3.8 percent in March, its biggest decline since April
2008, the firm’s Web site says. It gained an estimated 3.6
percent in May by betting against the dollar, which lost 6.6
percent that month against the euro.
“The positive returns may mark an end to the corrective
phase of our programs performance cycle,” wrote Kenneth
Webster, the Boca Raton, Florida, company’s president and chief
operating officer, in his May results letter to investors.
“Whether the movements of May signal the start of another run
of good performance based on new trends remains to be seen.”
Last Loss
FX Concepts’ Global Currency Program returned 11.5 percent
last year, after gaining 11.9 percent in 2007 and 18.7 percent
in 2006, according to Barclay Hedge, a Fairfield, Iowa-based
firm that tracks and invests in hedge funds. The last time FX
Concepts lost money was in 2004, when it fell 1.8 percent.
“There’s still no certainty,” said FX Concepts’ Taylor,
who is betting on the dollar will appreciate. “I feel like I
have a very good idea of what’s going to happen. So far it’s not
happening.”
The global economy will contract 2.9 percent this year, the
World Bank forecast on June 22, compared with a previous
estimate of a 1.7 percent decline. The U.S. unemployment rate is
likely to rise 9.7 percent next year, the highest since 1983,
according to the median forecast of 60 economists surveyed by
Bloomberg News. To end the recession, the Federal Reserve has
more than doubled its balance sheet to about $2 trillion in the
past year, stoking inflation concerns.
‘Frustrating Task’
“History shows that the best reward-to-risk trades are in
the direction of the long-term secular trend,” said Fall River
Capital LLC in its Web site’s May performance note. “The recent
rash of government intervention has made trading with this trend
a frustrating task as the very rationale for intervention is to
reverse the prevailing trend of a market.”
Fall River, which manages $300 million from Mequon,
Wisconsin, recorded losses this year through May ranging from
0.28 percent to 4.8 percent in the currency sector of its four
trading programs. It lost money betting on the franc’s rise
after the Swiss National Bank intervened to weaken it and
“caught us on the wrong side,” the company said.
Not all currency investors are doing badly. Half of 54
currency funds tracked by Deutsche Bank, have made money this
year, down from 32 of 51 in 2008, said Torquil Wheatley, a
manager for the bank in London.
‘High Frequency’
Among this year’s winners are “high-frequency” traders
who make hundreds of transactions a day to exploit “micro
trends,” he said. “Long-term momentum strategies have lost
money since the beginning of the year. The really short-term
trend followers have done well. They’ve dominated the year.”
Frank Pusateri, president of Adirondack Portfolio
Management, a Cleverdale, New York, consulting firm, said that
“trading a time frame beyond a week or two” is problematic
this year. “You’ve been getting strong moves in one direction
for one, or two, or three days and then they have been chopping
back at you real quickly,” he said.
In this environment, humans are beating computers,
according to Parker Global Strategies LLC, which tracks about 60
currency funds with $29 billion in combined assets.
Discretionary traders, who usually base decisions on economic
data, were up 0.92 percent in this year’s first five months,
while funds reliant on mathematical models lost 0.28 percent,
the Stamford, Connecticut, company said.
Past No Guide
Quantitative approaches based on historic trends will
continue to struggle, said Richard Benson, who oversees $14
billion of currency funds at Millennium Asset Management in
London. “Past is definitely not the guide to the future because
we’ve never been through an environment like this of huge fiscal
stimulus,” he said.
Decisions by central banks around the world to lower
benchmark interest rates have contributed to lackluster
performance, said Roddy Macpherson, investment director in
Edinburgh at Scottish Widows Investment Partnership Ltd., which
manages about 77 billion pounds ($125 billion). Rates are at 1
percent or less in the U.S., the U.K., Japan and the 16-nation
euro-zone.
“Rate differential is moving sideways, and you cannot spot
a trend,” he said. “When you have rates being capped, it’s
difficult for these things to break out.”
The currency market’s relatively small moves this year may
also be hurting U.S. commercial banks that execute transactions
for traders and make money on the difference between buy and
sell prices.
Consecutive Records
Banks’ revenue from foreign-exchange trading slid 40
percent to $2.4 billion in the first quarter after rising every
quarter last year and reaching consecutive record levels in the
final two, data from the U.S. Comptroller of the Currency show.
Benson said currency managers’ performance may improve as
recovering economies diverge, with China, Brazil and other
emerging economies better able to generate domestic growth than
the U.S., Europe and Japan.
“Currencies are very attractive as an asset class,”
Benson said. “Now we are at good levels especially for
discretionary fund mangers to take risk.”
To contact the reporters on this story:
Ye Xie in New York at
yxie6@bloomberg.net;
Liz Capo McCormick in New York at
emccormick7@bloomberg.net.
Last Updated: July 6, 2009 11:10 EDT