Understanding the profitability of currency-trading strategies.
Burnside, Craig ; Eichenbaum, Martin ; Rebelo, Sergio 等
The profitability of simple currency-trading strategies presents
perhaps even more of a challenge to traditional asset-pricing theory
than does the equity-premium puzzle, which has received an enormous
amount of attention. Understanding the properties of currency-trading
strategies is important not just for asset pricing but for
macroeconomics more generally. It is widely believed that these
strategies are partly responsible for the high volatility of
international capital flows, which are often viewed as problematic by
policymakers. Understanding the rationale for widely-used currency
strategies is important for understanding exchange rate movements in
general, as well as for assessing the normative and positive
implications of capital flows.
In a series of papers, we have studied two widely-used currency
strategies: carry trade and currency momentum. The carry-trade strategy
consists of borrowing low-interest-rate currencies and lending
high-interest-rate currencies. The currency-momentum strategy consists
of going long (short) on currencies for which long positions have
yielded positive (negative) returns in the recent past. One appealing
property of these strategies is that a practitioner does not need to
estimate any parameters to implement them. One could, of course,
entertain more complex versions of these strategies that, for example,
optimally weight different currencies, or introduce volatility triggers
that reduce exposure at times of high volatility.
This summary reviews our research on these trading strategies.
First, we describe the empirical properties of the payoffs to carry and
momentum. Second, we discuss whether these payoffs can be viewed as a
reward for exposure to conventional types of risk. Third, we explore the
plausibility of peso-event-based explanations of the payoffs. Finally,
we review our work emphasizing the importance of microstructure frictions and the behavioral biases in understanding currency trading
strategies.
Properties of Payoffs to Carry and Momentum
As in all of our work, here we consider a carry-trade strategy that
combines individual-currency carry trades into an equally-weighted
portfolio. We use the same 20 currencies considered in Burnside,
Eichenbaum and Rebelo (2011) [henceforth BER (2011)]. (1) The momentum
strategy discussed below combines individual currency-momentum
strategies into an equally-weighted portfolio of the same 20 currencies.
We implement a monthly version of both strategies. (2) All portfolios
are constructed assuming that the U.S. dollar is the domestic currency.
Figure 1 displays the cumulative returns to investing in the carry
and momentum strategies and in the U.S. stock market. The investment
period spans March 1976 to January 2012. (3) Two features of Figure 1
are worth noting. First, the cumulative returns to both strategies are
almost as high as the cumulative return to investing in stocks. Second,
the cumulative returns to the stock market are much more volatile than
those of the currency portfolios.
[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]
The carry-trade strategy has an average annualized payoff of 4.5
percent, with a standard deviation of 5.2 percent, and a Sharpe ratio
(the ratio of the mean excess return to its standard deviation) of 0.86.
The momentum strategy is also highly profitable, yielding an average
annualized payoff of 4.4 percent. The momentum payoffs have a standard
deviation of 7.3 percent and a Sharpe ratio of 0.60.
The Sharpe ratios of both currency strategies are substantially
higher than that of the stock market. The average excess return to the
U.S. stock market over our sample period is 6.5 percent, with a standard
deviation of 15.8 percent and a Sharpe ratio only equal to 0.41.
To an important degree, the high Sharpe ratio of the carry-trade
strategy reflects the large gains from diversifying across carry-trade
strategies for individual currencies (see Burnside, Eichenbaum,
Kleshchelski, and Rebelo (2006), henceforth BEKR (2006)). (4) In our
sample, this diversification cuts the volatility of the payoffs by more
than 50 percent. Since the average payoff is not affected, the Sharpe
ratio of the portfolio doubles relative to the average Sharpe ratio of
individual carry trades. (5) Similar gains to diversification obtain for
currency momentum.
Surprisingly, the payoffs to the carry and momentum strategies are
roughly uncorrelated. So, from an investor standpoint, there are obvious
gains to using both currency-trading strategies simulta-neously. Even
more striking is the fact that the payoffs to these strategies are
uncorrelated with stock market returns. So, the currency-trading
strategies provide a natural source of diversification when combined
with a broad portfolio of U.S. stocks.
Are the returns to the carry and momentum strategies compensation
for measurable risk?
The profitability of both currency strategies stems from the
failure of uncovered interest rate parity (UIP). According to this
condition, the rate of expected exchange rate depreciation of the
domestic currency is equal to the difference between the domestic and
the foreign interest rate. The empirical failure of this condition has
been extensively documented (see for example Fama (1984) and Eichenbaum
and Evans (1995)). (6)
The failure of UIP is not surprising from a theoretical
perspective. For UIP to hold, agents must be risk neutral. So, a natural
explanation for both the failure of UIP and the profitability of our
currency trading strategies is the presence of a risk premium that
compensates investors for the covariance between the payoffs to the
currency strategies and their stochastic discount factor. In BEKR
(2006), BER (2011), and Burnside, Eichenbaum, Kleshchelski, and Rebelo
(2011) [henceforth BEKR (2011)], and in Burnside (2010), (7) we argue
that the profitability of these strategies is not a compensation for
risk, at least as conventionally measured. Our basic argument is simple:
the covariance between the payoffs to these two strategies and
conventional risk factors is not statistically significant. Moreover,
these risk factors leave unexplained economically large and
statistically significant pricing errors. In the parlance of Wall
Street, these strategies seem to generate high alphas.
The difficulty in explaining the profitability of the carry trade
with conventional risk factors has led researchers such as Lustig,
Roussanov, and Verdelhan (2011) and Menkhoff, Sarno, Schmeling, and
Schrimpf (2012), (8) to construct empirical risk factors specifically
designed to price the average payoffs to portfolios of carry-trade
strategies.
A natural question is whether these risk factors explain the
profitability of the momentum strategy. BER (2011) argue that they
don't. In particular, they find that the risk factor models
proposed by Lustig et al. (2011) and Menkhoff et al. (2012) imply that
momentum has a large, statistically significant alpha.
It is one thing to argue that stock and currency markets are
segmented, so that we need currency-specific factors to price currency
strategies. But, surely, factors that explain carry-trade payoffs should
also explain the currency-momentum payoffs. Since they don't, we
are skeptical that the profitability of the carry trade and momentum
reflects exposure to observable risk factors.
One interesting possibility is that traders who specialize in these
strategies are being compensated for the fact that payoffs are strongly
negatively skewed. In fact, the carry trade is sometimes characterized
as "picking up pennies in front of a truck." In BEKR (2011)
and BER (2011), we find that the skewness of the carry-trade payoffs is
statistically insignificant. Even if we take the point estimates of
skewness at face value, the carry-trade payoffs are less skewed than the
payoffs to the U.S. stock market. The payoffs to the momentum portfolio
are actually positively skewed, though not significantly so. As far as
fat tails are concerned, currency returns do display excess kurtosis,
especially in the case of the carry-trade portfolio.
One way to illustrate the presence of fat tails in the payoffs
generated by our strategies is to compute the worst insample annual
payoffs to currency strategies. In our sample, the worst annual payoff
is negative 5.6 percent for the carry trade (in 2008) and negative 10.9
percent for momentum (in 2012). It is important to keep these losses in
perspective: the worst annual payoff to the U.S. stock market over our
sample was negative 40 percent (in 2008). By this metric, the dangers
associated with the fat tails of the currency strategies are much less
pronounced than those associated with the stock market.
The relatively small fat tails of the currency payoffs reflect, in
part, the gains from diversification. For example, the negative 5.6
percent payoff to the carry trade in 2008 masks great heterogeneity in
the individual carry-trade payoffs. During that year, the payoffs to the
carry trade of the U.S. dollar against the Norwegian krone or the New
Zealand dollar were both roughly negative 20 percent. In contrast, the
payoff to the carry trade of the U.S. dollar against the euro and the
Danish krone were both roughly 14 percent.
One interesting question is whether the presence of fat tails would
deter an investor from investing in the carry trade. To address this
question, BEKR (2006) consider an investor with a coefficient of
constant relative-risk-aversion equal to five. As it turns out, this
investor would allocate 187 percent of his portfolio to the carry trade,
68 percent to stocks, and borrow 157 percent at the risk-free rate.
These results are consistent with the notion that the carry trade is a
bigger asset-pricing puzzle than the equity premium.
"Peso Problems"
An alternative explanation for the profitability of our two
currency strategies is the possibility of rare disasters or "peso
problems? By rare disasters, we mean very low probability events that
sharply decrease the payoffs and/ or sharply increase the value of the
stochastic discount factor. These events may occur in sample. But, due
to their low probability, they may be under-represented relative to
their true frequency in population. As a result, a researcher would
over-estimate the profitability of currency trading. By a "peso
problem," we mean the effects on inference caused by the most
extreme form of under-representation: the events do not occur in sample.
In BEKR (2011), we study the empirical plausibility of the
peso-problem explanation by analyzing the payoffs to a version of the
carry-trade strategy that does not yield high negative payoffs in a peso
state. The strategy works as follows. When an investor borrows foreign
currency, he simultaneously buys a call option on that currency with the
same maturity as the foreign currency loan. If the foreign currency
appreciates beyond the strike price, the investor can buy the foreign
currency at the strike price and repay the loan.9 Similarly, when an
investor lends in foreign currency, he can hedge the downside risk by
buying a put option on the currency. By construction, this "hedged
carry trade" is immune to large losses such as those potentially
associated with a peso event.
BEKR (2011) use data on currency options to estimate the average
risk-adjusted payoff to the hedged carry trade. They find that this
payoff is smaller than the payoff to the unhedged carry trade. This
finding is consistent with the view that the average payoff to the
unhedged carry trade reflects a peso problem. An obvious question is:
what is the nature of the peso event for which agents are being
compensated?
It is useful to distinguish between two extreme possibilities. The
first possibility is that the salient feature of a peso state is large
carry-trade losses. The second possibility is that the salient feature
of a peso state is a large value of the stochastic discount factor. BEKR
(2011) find that a peso event reflects high values of the stochastic
discount factor in the peso state rather than very large negative
payoffs to the unhedged carry trade in that state.
The intuition for this result is as follows: any risk-adjusted
payoffs associated with the carry trade in the nonpeso states must, on
average, be compensated, on a risk-adjusted basis, for losses in the
peso state. According to our estimates, the average risk-adjusted
payoffs of the hedged and unhedged carry trade in the non-peso states
are not very different. Consequently, the risk-adjusted losses to these
two strategies in the peso state cannot be very different. Since the
value of the stochastic discount factor in the peso state is the same
for both strategies, the actual losses of the two strategies in the peso
state must be similar. By construction there is an upper bound to the
losses of the hedged carry trade. This upper bound tells us how much the
hedged carry-trade strategy loses in the peso state. Since these losses
turn out to be small, the losses to the unhedged carry trade in the peso
state must also be small.
The rationale for why the stochastic discount factor is much larger
in the peso state than in the non-peso states is as follows. We just
argued that the unhedged carry trade makes relatively small losses in
the peso state. At the same time, the average risk-adjusted pay-off to
the unhedged carry trade in the non-peso states is large. The only way
to rationalize these observations is for the stochastic discount factor
to be very high in the peso state. So, even though the losses of the
unhedged carry trade in the peso state are moderate, the investor
attaches great importance to them.
In BER (2011), we use a similar approach to study an
equally-weighted portfolio of carry trade and momentum strategies.
Again, we find that the only way to rationalize the hedged and unhedged
payoffs is to characterize the peso event as one that involves moderate
losses but a high value of the stochastic discount factor.
It is worth emphasizing that the 2008 financial crisis is not an
example of the kind of rare disaster that rationalizes the profitability
of currency trading. The reason is simple: momentum made money during
the financial crisis.
Microstructure Based Explanations of the Profitability of Currency
Strategies
The peso event rationalization takes a very macroeconomic perspective of the risks to currency traders. In this section, we
discuss our work that focuses on the microstructure of foreign exchange
markets.
Macroeconomists generally assume that asset markets are Walrasian
in nature. This assumption is highly questionable. The foreign exchange
market is actually a decentralized, over-the-counter market in which
market makers play a central role. In BER (2011 and 2009) (10), we
explore the impact of two types of microstructure frictions that can
potentially account for key anomalies in exchange rate markets.
BER (2011) explore the impact of price pressure in foreign exchange
markets on the profitability of our currency-trading strategies. By
price pressure we mean that the price at which investors can buy or sell
currencies depends on the quantity they wish to transact. Price pressure
introduces a wedge between marginal and average payoffs to a trading
strategy. As a result, observed average payoffs can be positive even
though the marginal trade is not profitable. So, traders do not increase
their exposure to the strategy to the point where observed average
risk-adjusted payoffs are zero.
Finally, BER (2009) study an adverse-selection model that
rationalizes the failure of UIP. The key feature of the model economy
studied in that paper is that the adverse selection problem facing
market makers is worse when, based on public information, the currency
is expected to appreciate. The model can rationalize the forward premium
puzzle: a regression of the change in the exchange rate on the forward
premium has a negative slope. (11)
Behavioral Explanations for the Forward Premium Puzzle
Burnside, Han, Hirshleifer, and Wang (2011) (12) offer an
alternative explanation for the forward premium puzzle in foreign
exchange markets based upon investor overconfidence. In the most basic
version of their model, a positive (bad) signal about U.S. inflation
causes the U.S. dollar to depreciate in the spot market. It depreciates
even more in the forward market because expected future U.S. dollar
depreciation is associated with the positive inflationary signal. Given
agents' overconfidence, however, both the spot rate and the forward
rate tend to overshoot their long-run level. So, when agents observe a
signal of higher future inflation, the consequent rise in the forward
premium predicts a subsequent downward correction of the spot rate. The
model can explain the forward premium puzzle and several other stylized
facts related to the joint behavior of forward and spot exchange rates.
It is also consistent with the availability of profitable carry-trade
strategies. Versions of the model that incorporate New Keynesian
frictions can, additionally, rationalize both the forward-premium puzzle
and the observation that bad signals about U.S. inflation are often
associated with U.S. dollar appreciation, rather than depreciation (see
Andersen et al., 2003 and Clarida and Waldman, 2008). (13)
Concluding Remarks
In this note, we have reviewed our work on currency-trading
strategies. We view this work as fitting into a broader research agenda
of incorporating realistic financial frictions into modern macro models.
A critical component of this agenda will involve asking who is on the
other side of common trading strategies and why. We suspect that the
answer will inevitably involve heterogeneity in expectations and
persistent disagreement among agents. Allowing for these elements
requires fundamental changes in mainstream macro models. For some recent
steps in this directions see, for example, Acemoglu, Chernozhukov and
Yildiz (2009), Angeletos and La'O (2011), Brunnermeier and Wei
Xiong, (2012), Simsek (2012), and Burnside, Eichenbaum and Rebelo
(2012). (14)
(1.) The countries included in our sample are: Australia, Austria,
Belgium, Canada, Denmark, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Japan, the
Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Portugal, South Africa, Spain, Sweden,
Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and the United States.
(2.) For the momentum strategy, we use returns obtained in the
previous month to decide whether to go long or short on the currency.
See C. Burnside, M.S. Eichenbaum, and S. Rebelo, "Carry Trade and
Momentum in Currency Markets," NBER Working Paper No. 16942, April
2011, and Annual Review of Financial Economics, 3 (December 2011), pp.
511-35.
(3.) Since the currency strategies involve zero net investment, we
compute the cumulative payoffs. as follows: we initially deposit one
U.S. dollar in a bank account that yields the same rate of return as the
Treasury bill rate. In the beginning of every period, we bet the balance
of the bank account on the strategy. At the end of the period, payof to
the strategy are deposited into the bank account.
(4.) C. Burnside, M.S. Eichenbaum, I. Kleshchelski, and S. Rebelo,
"The Returns to Currency Speculation," NBER Working Paper No.
12489, August 2006.
(5.) See C. Burnside, M.S. Eichenbaum, and S. Rebelo, "Carry
Trade: the Gains from Diversification,"Journal of the European
Economic Association, 6(2-3) (April-May 2008), pp. 581-8. They show that
similar diversification effects hold for carry-strategies implemented
with emerging market currencies.
(6.) In fact, Burnside, Eichenbaum, Kleshchelski, and Rebelo (2006)
show that currency-trading strategies that use the interest rate
differential to forecast the returns for going long in a particular
currency have lower Sharpe ratios than the carry trade. See E. Fama,
"Forward and spot exchange rates," Journal of Monetary
Economics, Volume 14, Issue 3 (November 1984), pp.319-38, and M.
Eichenbaum and C. Evans "Some Empirical Evidence on the Effects of
Shocks to Monetary Policy on Exchange Rates," NBER Working Paper
No. 4271, February 1993, and The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 110(4)
(1995): pp. 975-1009.
(7.) C. Burnside, M.S. Eichenbaum, I Kleshchelski, and S. Rebelo,
"Do Peso Problems Explain the Returns to the Carry Trade?"
NBER Working Paper No. 14054, June 2008, and Review of Financial
Studies, 24(3) (March 2011), pp. 853-91, and C. Burnside, "Carry
Trades and Risk," NBER Working Paper No. 17278, August 2011, and in
Handbook of Exchange Rates,J. James, I.W. Marsh, and L. Sarno, eds.,
John Wiley & Sons, 2012, pp. 283-312
(8) H Lustig, N Roussanov, and A. Verdelhan, "Common Risk
Factors in Currency Markets," NBER Working Paper No. 14082, June
2008, and Review of Financial Studies, 24(11) (November 2011), pp.
3731-77, and L. Menai,' L. Sarno, M Schmeling, and A. Schrimpf
"Currency Momentum Strategies,"Journal of Financial Economics,
forthcoming.
(9.) It is possible that the counterparty in the options would
default in the peso event. However, investors use options traded in
exchanges to hedge. Since these contracts are marked to market on a
daily basis, the risk of a default appears to be quite small at a
practical level.
(10.) C. Burnside, M.S. Eichenbaum, and S. Rebelo,
"Understanding the Forward Premium Puzzle: A Microstructure
Approach," NBER Working Paper No. 13278, July 2007, and American
Economic Journal: Macroeconomics, 1(2) (July 2009), pp. 127-54.
(11.) The forward premium is the percentage difference between the
forward rate and the spot exchange rate.
(12.) C. Burnside, B. Han, D. Hirshleifer, and T.Y. Wang,
"Investor Overconfidence and the Forward Premium Puzzle," NBER
Working Paper No. 15866, April 2010, and Review of Economic Studies,
78(2) (April 2011), pp. 523-58.
(13.) T.G. Andersen, T Bollerslev, F Diebold, and C. Vega,
"Micro Effects of Macro Announcements: Real-time Price Discovery in
Foreign Exchange," NBER Working Paper No. 8959, May 2002, and
American Economic Review, 93 (March 2003), pp. 38-62, and R. Clarida and
D. Waldman, "Is Bad News about Inflation Good News for the Exchange
Rate? And, If So, Can That Tell Us Anything about the Conduct of
Monetary Policy?" NBER Working Paper No. 13010, April2007, and in
Asset Prices and Monetary Policy, J.Y. Campbell, ed. (Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 2008), pp. 371-92.
(14.) D. Acemoglu, V Chernozhukov, and M. Yildiz, "Fragility
of Asymptotic Agreement under Bayesian Learning," MIT Working Paper
No. 08-09, February 2009; G-M. Angeletos and J. La'0, "Optimal
Monetary Policy with Information Frictions," NBER Working Paper No.
17525, November 2011; M.K. Brunnermeier and Xiong Wei, l'il Welfare
Criterion for Models with Heterogeneous Beliefs," Working Paper,
October 2011; and A. Simsek, "Belief Disagreement and Collateral
Constraints," Working Paper, March 2012.
Craig Burnside, Martin Eichenbaum, and Sergio Rebelo *
* Burnside, Eichenbaum, and Rebelo are Research Associates in the
NBER's Program on Economic Fluctuations and Growth. Their profiles
appear later in this issue.