Today, I would like to present a review of a research paper called Crowds, Crashes, and the Carry Trade. It was published by Valeri Sokolovski, a finance scholar at the Stockholm School of Economics. It was presented by Mr. Sokolovski at the conference called Exchange Rate Models for a New Era: Major and Emerging Market Currencies organized by the City University of Hong Kong. The article is available for free download in our Forex
Crowdedness
As the title of the work suggests, it is dedicated entirely to the carry trade and its relation to the carry trade crowdedness — a term that describers a measure of the total volume of carry trade positions held by investors globally. The author uses spot FX correlation implied crowdedness and its effect on the negative carry trade returns amplification as the main research subjects.
The idea behind this measure is simple — when there is a strong correlation between currencies that can be used as the carry trade funding sources but are otherwise unrelated, traders are either opening or closing carry trade positions. For example, simultaneous jumps in CHF and JPY rates would imply a growth of carry trade positions, while their simultaneous fall would imply a decline in carry trade activity.
Additionally, Valeri uses
Crowds, Crashes, and the Carry Trade
Main Conclusions
The most important conclusions made by Valeri Sokolovsi in his article are the following:
Why Read It
You definitely need to read this
If you have any questions, comments, or opinions regarding Crowds, Crashes, and the Carry Trade, please feel free to post them using the commentary form below.