In fact, stock investors are increasingly using currencies to hedge against risks with their stock portfolios. However, the problem with doing this is they have to manage their currency and stock investments separately, making this sort of diversification difficult to handle. New currency exchange-traded funds (ETFs) eliminate this problem. With a currency ETF, an ETF management firm buys currency pairs and holds them in a fund. The firm then sells shares in the ETF to individual investors, who can then buy and sell them in just the way that they buy and sell stocks. As the currency pair arises, the corresponding share price rises in tandem, and the share price falls as the currency falls.
To understand why investors are interested in using currencies rather than just buying other shares, it is important to know the different types of risk in the stock market. The first is what is known as idiosyncratic risk – the risk that any particular stock will fall. For instance, if a company reports poor results, the stock price will typically fall, even if its competitors are doing well. This type of risk can be managed by buying a broader basket of stocks. However, there is also systematic risk – the risk that the entire stock market will fall. You only need to look at the initial effects of the recent world economic crisis to see this type of risk in action.
Buying a broader range of stocks doesn’t combat systemic risk. However, investing in currencies can do exactly this. For example, consider the Swiss franc. In general, history has shown that the Swiss franc rises against the US dollar when bond yields fall. Since falling bond yields generally happen when the stock market falls, holding a position in CHF/USD can hedge against the risk of a bear market. Similarly, the Canadian dollar tends to rise as oil prices rise, since Canada is a major oil producer. Because of this, investing in a CAD/USD ETF can be used to hedge against the impact of higher energy prices on the stock market.
Editors’ Picks
AUD/USD hangs near one-week low; downside seems limited
AUD/USD trades with a negative bias for the fifth straight day on Wednesday, just above a one-week low touched the previous day, as a weaker risk tone and China's economic woes undermine the Aussie. However, the RBA's hawkish stance could limit deeper losses. Moreover, bets for more rate cuts by the Fed in 2026 keep a lid on the attempted US Dollar recovery, warranting some caution for bearish traders ahead of US CPI on Thursday.
USD/JPY dips as bearish pressure persists despite ETF growth
Ripple is finding footing above $1.90 at the time of writing on Tuesday after a bearish wave swept across the broader cryptocurrency market, building on persistent negative sentiment.
Gold extends the range play around $4,300
Gold edges higher during the Asian session on Wednesday, though it remains confined in a multi-day-old trading range. Dovish Fed-inspired bearish sentiment surrounding the US Dollar, along with the risk-off mood, acts as a tailwind for the safe-haven bullion. However, hopes for a Russia-Ukraine peace deal hold back the XAU/USD bulls from placing aggressive bets. Traders also seem reluctant ahead of the crucial US consumer inflation figures on Thursday.
XRP dips as bearish pressure persists despite ETF growth
Ripple is finding footing above $1.90 at the time of writing on Tuesday after a bearish wave swept across the broader cryptocurrency market, building on persistent negative sentiment.
Ukraine-Russia in the spotlight once again
Since the start of the week, gold’s price has moved lower, but has yet to erase the gains made last week. In today’s report we intend to focus on the newest round of peace talks between Russia and Ukraine, whilst noting the release of the US Employment data later on day and end our report with an update in regards to the tensions brewing in Venezuela.
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