Wednesday, October 29, 2008

"and being taken aback by the amount of buying on margin in which ordinary Japanese investors were indulging."

Japanese investors also invested in the carry trade, and the rise of the yen has caused them some problems. John Gapper in the FT:

The abrupt rise of the yen and the dollar against higher-yielding currencies seems to have been driven by hedge funds unwinding various forms of carry trade - borrowing in a low-yielding currency and investing in assets in higher-yield economies. This has caused havoc in financial markets in the past couple of weeks...

Hedge funds that invested heavily the carry trade, using leverage, are obviously in trouble to judge by the rapid changes in exchange rates...

The accounts showed that it was common for Japanese retail investors to be offered leverage of 20 times or more for their cash. In other words, they could deposit the equivalent of $1,000 and take trading positions of $20,000. A lot of them had used the opportunity to buy higher-yielding foreign assets.

The trade worked fine for Japanese investors as long as currencies remained stable and they could in effect switch yen into higher-yielding assets denominated in other currencies. But the sharp rise in the yen - and comparative fall in the value of these foreign assets - is probably landing Mrs Watanabe and her friends with big losses.

Here, to expand the point, is a prescient piece from FT Alphaville a year ago."

Pretty straightforward.


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