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Aussie Surge Takes Sting Out of Bond Losses for Global Investors
Aussie Surge Takes Sting Out of Bond Losses for Global Investors
Wednesday,16/03/2016|21:31GMTby
Bloomberg News
A rally in the Australian dollar is taking the sting out of losses in the nation’s bonds for global...
A rally in the Australian dollar is taking the sting out of losses in the nation’s bonds for global investors, and 30-year market veteran Toshifumi Sugimoto sees further gains.
The country’s sovereign debt generated a loss of 1 percent over the past month, among the world’s worst. A surge in the Australian dollar means it has gained 4 percent in U.S. currency terms, behind only Greece and Portugal among 26 debt markets tracked by Bloomberg and the European Federation of Financial Analysts Societies.
“The Australian dollar will get strong because Australia has a high yield,” said Sugimoto, the chief investment officer at Capital Asset Management in Tokyo. “I’m looking at a weak yen and a strong U.S. dollar this year because the Fed may raise interest rates, but Japan’s interest rate is low. There will be more purchases by Japanese investors.”
Haven Demand
The Aussie has risen against its U.S. counterpart and fallen against the yen this year as a flight to quality in the global financial markets sent investors to the perceived safety of Japan’s currency. The trend is running its course, and interest rates will emerge as the main force driving currencies, Sugimoto said. The Australian dollar will rise about 6 percent to 90 yen by year-end, he said.
Traders are increasingly betting RBA chief Glenn Stevens will hold the nation’s benchmark rate at 2 percent as growth quickens. Yields suggest traders expect 19 basis points of interest-rate reductions in the coming six months. It was 28 basis points as recently as March 9.
Australia’s economy expanded 3 percent in the fourth quarter from the year-earlier period, the government reported this month, the fastest pace since the start of 2014.
ECB, BOJ
Central bankers in Europe and Japan are undertaking unprecedented monetary easing to revive their economies. The ECB surprised investors this month with the extent of a new stimulus package. In February, the Bank of Japan unexpectedly added negative rates to its quantitative-easing program.
The Aussie is vulnerable as economic growth slows in China, said Hans Goetti, the chief strategist for the Middle East and Asia at Banque Internationale a Luxembourg, which has $36.4 billion under management.
The two are linked because China is the biggest customer for Australia’s commodity exports, Goetti said in an interview in Singapore. A bet against the Aussie, a so-called short, will benefit as growth in the Asian nation slows, he said.
“The concern is China,” Goetti said. “If you want to short China, just short the Australian dollar. ”
National Australia Bank Ltd. has seen a jump in foreign demand for the nation’s bonds after Japan adopted negative interest rates, said Peter Jolly, the head of market research in Sydney.
To contact the reporter on this story: Wes Goodman in Singapore at wgoodman@bloomberg.net. To contact the editors responsible for this story: Garfield Reynolds at greynolds1@bloomberg.net, Jonathan Annells
A rally in the Australian dollar is taking the sting out of losses in the nation’s bonds for global investors, and 30-year market veteran Toshifumi Sugimoto sees further gains.
The country’s sovereign debt generated a loss of 1 percent over the past month, among the world’s worst. A surge in the Australian dollar means it has gained 4 percent in U.S. currency terms, behind only Greece and Portugal among 26 debt markets tracked by Bloomberg and the European Federation of Financial Analysts Societies.
“The Australian dollar will get strong because Australia has a high yield,” said Sugimoto, the chief investment officer at Capital Asset Management in Tokyo. “I’m looking at a weak yen and a strong U.S. dollar this year because the Fed may raise interest rates, but Japan’s interest rate is low. There will be more purchases by Japanese investors.”
Haven Demand
The Aussie has risen against its U.S. counterpart and fallen against the yen this year as a flight to quality in the global financial markets sent investors to the perceived safety of Japan’s currency. The trend is running its course, and interest rates will emerge as the main force driving currencies, Sugimoto said. The Australian dollar will rise about 6 percent to 90 yen by year-end, he said.
Traders are increasingly betting RBA chief Glenn Stevens will hold the nation’s benchmark rate at 2 percent as growth quickens. Yields suggest traders expect 19 basis points of interest-rate reductions in the coming six months. It was 28 basis points as recently as March 9.
Australia’s economy expanded 3 percent in the fourth quarter from the year-earlier period, the government reported this month, the fastest pace since the start of 2014.
ECB, BOJ
Central bankers in Europe and Japan are undertaking unprecedented monetary easing to revive their economies. The ECB surprised investors this month with the extent of a new stimulus package. In February, the Bank of Japan unexpectedly added negative rates to its quantitative-easing program.
The Aussie is vulnerable as economic growth slows in China, said Hans Goetti, the chief strategist for the Middle East and Asia at Banque Internationale a Luxembourg, which has $36.4 billion under management.
The two are linked because China is the biggest customer for Australia’s commodity exports, Goetti said in an interview in Singapore. A bet against the Aussie, a so-called short, will benefit as growth in the Asian nation slows, he said.
“The concern is China,” Goetti said. “If you want to short China, just short the Australian dollar. ”
National Australia Bank Ltd. has seen a jump in foreign demand for the nation’s bonds after Japan adopted negative interest rates, said Peter Jolly, the head of market research in Sydney.
To contact the reporter on this story: Wes Goodman in Singapore at wgoodman@bloomberg.net. To contact the editors responsible for this story: Garfield Reynolds at greynolds1@bloomberg.net, Jonathan Annells
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