To Hedge FX Risk, or Not to Hedge: Currency markets are notoriously difficult to call but can meaningfully impact portfolio returns. ETF Strategist Bipan Rai provides a detailed framework for investing outside the Canadian market.
By Bipan Rai, BMO Global Asset Management
(Sponsor Blog)
Admittedly, using a spin on a famous Shakespeare quote to start a note on currency hedging1 is verging on trite. Nevertheless, if Hamlet were running a portfolio of overseas assets, his primary concern would have to be the “slings and arrows” of currency markets — which are notoriously difficult to call but can meaningfully impact portfolio returns.
For Canadian investors, looking abroad provides several benefits. The most important is diversification, whether it’s through access to other regions that are less correlated with Canadian markets or to other products that aren’t available domestically.
However, investing abroad also means taking on foreign exchange risk given that international assets are priced in currencies other than the Canadian dollar (CAD).
For illustrative purposes, consider Chart 1, which shows the total return for the S&P 500 in U.S. dollars (USD) and in CAD terms for Q1 of this year. In USD terms, the index was up 10.6% over that time frame, but since that period also corresponded to weakness in the CAD relative to the USD (or USD/CAD moved higher) the index outperformed in CAD terms (up 13.3%). That means that Canadian investors would have fared much better leaving their USD exposure unhedged ex ante.
Chart 1 – S&P 500 Total Return for Q1 2024
Source: BMO Global Asset Management
Now let’s look at an alternative period in which the CAD strengthened against the USD. Chart 2 shows a comparison of the total return for the S&P 500 from April 2020 to April 2021 (in which USD/CAD was lower by over 11%). During that period, the total return index outperformed in USD terms by close to 20%. In this scenario, an investor who had hedged their FX risk would have been in the optimal position.
Chart 2 – S&P 500 Total Return Between April 2020 – April 2021
Source: BMO Global Asset Management
As these examples show, currency risk is a key consideration for any investor who wants to look beyond Canada for diversification. That risk can cut both ways, which amplifies the importance of hedging decisions. In our minds, the decision to hedge foreign exchange (FX )risk (including the degree to which foreign exposure is hedged) comes down to the following:
- An investor’s view of the underlying currency pair
- Whether the currency pair is positively or negatively correlated2 with the underlying asset
In this note, we’ll make a brief comment on the first point but focus largely on the second one. as we feel that should be given more weight for hedging decisions.
FX Markets are Tough to Call
Taking a view on the underlying currency pair is easy to do — but difficult to capitalize on.
Indeed, foreign exchange markets are notoriously fickle. One reason why is the relationship between predictive factors and currency pairs is rarely stationary. For instance, a lot of market participants tend to use front-end (2-year) yield spreads as a proxy for central bank divergence in the spot FX market. Chart 3 shows the current correlation between those spreads and the different CAD crosses, and as expected, the relationship isn’t consistent from a cross-sectional perspective.
Chart 3 – Correlation Between Two-Year Spreads and the CAD Crosses
* * Correlation window is 2 years. The CAD is used as a base currency for this analysis. The spread is tabulated by subtracting the foreign 2-year yield from the CAD 2-year yield. Source: Bloomberg, BMO Global Asset Management.
We can also see this by looking closer at the relationship between a factor and a currency pair over time. Chart 4 shows the rolling 100-day correlation between USD/CAD and the price of oil (proxied by the prompt WTI contract3) going back ten years. Note how frequently the strength of the correlation (as well as the sign) changes over time.
Additionally, there is no bulletproof way to come up with a cogent ‘fair value’ model for a currency pair. This is not only because the nature of the relationship with factors is inconsistent, but also because (unlike stocks or bonds) there is no future cash flow to discount when you go long or short a currency pair. The changing nature of the macro alongside the sheer size and depth of the FX market makes it near impossible to have an edge, or generate alpha4 over the long-term — particularly for developed market currency pairs.
Of course, this is not to say that a view on the currency pair isn’t important. Even if relationships are unsteady, there is still some information to be gleaned for FX when oil prices trend a certain way, or if we do see a degree of central bank divergence. Indeed, this will always be an important input for projecting returns for a hedged or unhedged investment.
Rather, the point is that an investor needs to augment a currency view with something else to make an informed decision as to whether or not to hedge FX risk.
Chart 4 – Rolling 100-day Correlation Between USD/CAD and Oil Prices Over Time
Source: BMO Global Asset Management.
How to Approach the Hedging Decision
For Canadian investors, there are a lot of domestic ETFs that allow for participation in the U.S. markets. For those that are denominated in CAD, issuers offer both hedged and unhedged versions, depending upon the investor’s preference. Also, there are options for those investors to instead buy USD-denominated ETFs that track U.S. markets, but trade on Canadian exchanges.
Since mid-2021, an option for Canadian investors who wanted access to the S&P 500 would have been to buy the unhedged ETF (including ZSP. which is the BMO S&P 500 Index ETF). That’s primarily because the CAD has weakened relative to the USD over that time frame, which has provided an additional return via the currency on top of the underlying.
However, focusing on returns masks something else that’s important to consider. Indeed, the ZSP offers yet another advantage relative to its cousin ETF which hedges for FX risk (ZUE or BMO S&P 500 Hedged to CAD Index ETF). That advantage is that it’s far less volatile. For instance, Chart 5 shows a comparison between the 90-day realized volatility5 for the ZUE and ZSP over the past few years. Most of the time, it’s the unhedged ETF (or the ZSP) which has the lower volatility. What this means is that investors who hedged their exposure would not only have had lower returns, but their volatility profile would have increased as well.
Chart 5 – A Comparison of 90-day Volatility for ZUE and ZSP
Admittedly, that feels counterintuitive. After all, shouldn’t hedging FX risk mitigate volatility given that currency risk is negated?
Unfortunately, it’s not that simple. Recall, that when a Canadian investor buys an unhedged U.S.-tracking ETF, that investor is effectively long (bought)the underlying asset and the USD. Over the past several years, the performance of the USD has been (directionally) inversely correlated with the S&P 500. This is due to the USD’s appeal as a liquid safe-haven during periods of risk-off. That means that by not hedging their USD risk, Canadian investors are adding an uncorrelated asset – which reduces volatility at the margin.
Table 1 – A Comparison of Returns and Vols for ZUE and ZSP for the Past Two Years6
September 30, 2022, to September 30, 2024.
A General Rule that may be Followed …
As a general rule, for any ETF that tracks a foreign market, if the basket of underlying securities is …
- Negatively correlated to the foreign currency -> there is a diversification benefit from currency exposure
- Positively correlated to the foreign currency -> there is less of a diversification benefit from currency exposure
In the case of I), the unhedged version of the ETF would provide less volatility than the hedged version. For II), the reverse is more likely to be true.
For a Canadian investor looking to increase allocation to broad risk in the U.S. (say the S&P 500), it makes more sense to consider sticking with an unhedged ETF (ZSP). That also dovetails nicely with the view that the Bank of Canada will likely have to ease by more than is currently priced into the Overnight index swap (OIS)7market – which would hit the CAD.
However, correlation regimes can change. For instance, let’s say the regime flips, and the USD becomes positively correlated with broad risk. In that scenario, the Canadian investor would likely have to consider a hedged ETF – provided that the CAD isn’t underperforming the USD in that environment. The only environment in which this scenario makes sense is if there is a USD-specific shock that doesn’t impact U.S. equities. One scenario in which this could happen is if the market starts attaching a greater premium in the USD for sustained budget deficits.
All told, the above provides a framework for hedging decisions for our readers when it comes to investing outside of the Canadian market. Much like our friend Hamlet in his famous speech, having a plan allows investors to “take arms against a sea of troubles — and by opposing (potentially) end them.”
1 Currency hedging is an attempt to reduce the effects of currency fluctuations on investment performance.
2 Correlation: A statistical measure of how two securities move in relation to one another. Positive correlation indicates similar movements, up or down together, while negative correlation indicates opposite movements (when one rises, the other falls).
3 The ICE West Texas Intermediate (WTI) Light Sweet Crude Oil Futures Contract
4 Alpha: A measure of performance often considered the active return on an investment. It gauges the performance of an investment against a market index or benchmark which is considered to represent the market’s movement as a whole. The excess return of an investment relative to the return of a benchmark index is the investment’s alpha.
5 Volatility measures how much the price of a security, derivative, or index fluctuates. 90 day realized volatility represents the realized volatility of the asset over the last 90 days. It calculates the actual volatility observed in the price movements of the asset during this specific period. All investments involve risk. The value of an ETF can go down as well as up and you could lose money. Historical volatility doesn’t tell you how volatile an ETF will be in the future
6 Annualized Performance Data, ZSP and ZUE:
Performance (%) | YTD | 1-Month | 3-Month | 6-Month | 1-Year | 3-Year | 5-Year | 10-Year | Since Inception |
ZSP | 24.32 | 2.48 | 4.59 | 10.08 | 35.28 | 13.99 | 16.07 | 15.10 | 17.53 |
ZUE | 21.03 | 2.04 | 5.45 | 9.64 | 34.31 | 10.27 | 14.21 | 11.83 | 13.36 |
As of September 30, 2024. ZSP inception date was November 12, 2012. ZUE inception date was May 29, 2009.
7 An overnight index swap is an interest rate swap in which a fixed rate is exchanged for an overnight floating rate. The OIS market includes a variety of maturities and currencies.
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