The Carry Trade Sweeps The Sahm Rule Aside


Events are happening fast in the financial markets. Suddenly a large convergence of negative catalysts are pressuring financial markets from all corners. The ink is still wet on writing about the sudden burst of interest in the Sahm Rule that signals a likely recession once the unemployment rate reaches “lift-off” velocity. Now, the ink needs to transfer to the carry trade. Google trends, which measures relative search interest in a keyword or phrase, shows a sharp rise in interest in the “carry trade” search term over the past several hours (at the time of writing). This interest surged past the interest in the Sahm Rule a hour before Japanese stock market opened for trading (Monday, August 5 Tokyo time). At the time of writing, the carry trade is trending to surpass the Sahm Rule by the open of trading in the U.S.

The Carry Trade
Simply put, the carry trade is the act of borrowing in a currency with low interest rates and using those funds to buy assets with higher rates or anticipated returns (like stocks). The Japanese yen became an “easy” carry trade for big investors because the Japanese yen (FXY) had near zero interest rates. Once the Fed started hiking rates, traders could earn increasing returns by borrowing in yen and buying U.S. bonds. After equity markets bottomed in October 2023, traders could earn increasing return borrowing yen to buy stocks (at least one analyst thinks the carry trade has been in effect since the rebound from the Great Financial Crisis!). Cryptocurrencies are even acting like they have been caught up in this massive delveraging. At the time of writing Bitcoin (BTC/USD) is down around 24% in just 8 days and looks like it could soon reverse all its gains since the SEC approved Bitcoin spot ETFs. The strength in the yen and the presumed unwind of the carry trade has been breathtaking over the last two weeks. The Australian dollar versus the Japanese yen (AUD/JPY) has fallen around 17% in the three weeks since its last peak. AUD/JPY now sits at levels last seen in early June, 2023. AUD/JPY has long been my favorite currency market indicator of sentiment in the stock market. However, the current decline happened so rapidly, that I had no time to adjust my mind to appreciating that AUD/JPY suddenly mattered again in a significant way. After all, the Bank of Japan “only” hiked its target rate from 0% to 0.25%. The hawkish tone of the BoJ on normalizing policy must have traders scrambling to get completely out of the way of future rate hikes.

So what now?
Financial markets are essentially in panic mode. It is near impossible for the stampeding herds to see the other side of this major market disruption. As a contrarian of extremes in financial markets, I am compelled to lean the other way even though market breadth in the stock market still needs to fall significantly to hit oversold levels. Thus, I cannot buy as aggressively as I normally would…”nibbling” is my modus operandi for now (I am also re-accumulating cryptocurrency positions like BTC/USD).In currency markets, I slipped on my well-crafted trading strategy on the Japanese yen. I gave up on the short GBP/JPY too early, and got overly confident in what looked like the obligatory rebound for USD/JPY side. So, in recent days, I have raced to keep up with new short GBP/JPY positions and have been simply astounded by how fast these positions hit profit targets. This clearing in turn forces me to reload at lower prices as the Japanese yen keeps racing away. Last week, I even dabbled in shares and call options in Invesco CurrencyShares® Japanese Yen Trust ETF (FXY). At SOME point, this non-stop slide in yen currency pairs will end and give way to a (potentially) abrupt and vicious countertrend relief rally. That time will offer a brief opportunity to bail on short yen positions and then step aside to catch a few breaths!Be careful out there!More By This Author:The New Recession Obsession: The Sahm Rule
An Inflation Story
Now The Market Just Needs The Rate Cuts

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