Optimising Emerging Market Currency Carry Trades using Risk Indicators

Detta är en Master-uppsats från KTH/Industriell ekonomi och organisation (Inst.)

Sammanfattning: The currency carry trade – whereby one simultaneously borrows in a currency with low interest rate and invests in a currency with high interest rate – is estimated to be at least USD 2.0 trillion in emerging markets alone. By some characterised as “picking up nickels in front of a steam roller”, the carry trade is subject to pronounced periods of disadvantageous currency depreciations. Although the carry trade has been profitable historically, these sudden depreciations at least attenuate, if not completely eradicate returns. The search for yield has led contemporary investors to emerging markets where the volatility is higher, thereby increasing risk and prospective return. The purpose of this thesis is to investigate how quantitative risk indicators can be constructed in order to detect market-reversals, mitigate currency depreciations, and ultimately improve the profitability of the emerging market currency carry trade. For this purpose risk has been categorised into two dichotomous risk classes, global and idiosyncratic; the former referring to systematic, non-country specific risk; the latter to residual, country specific risk. Each risk has been modelled separately. By optimising carry trade return conditioned on a number of distinctive risk measures, attributable to the respective risks, it was concluded that a broad weighted global risk indicator provide substantially augmented risk-adjusted return in an emerging market carry trade, while idiosyncratic indicators might require a bespoke framework for each currency at hand.

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