The largest position in the
portfolio, by some distance is the L USD exposure which (adjusting for
leverage) represents almost 50% NAV, versus the Euro (mainly) and also the
Australian Dollar. The high-level premise is fairly simple; the long
supercycle bear market in the US dollar, that began at the peak back in
late-84/early-85 has come to its end. The below chart (with OEW technical
notation), from the excellent Tony Caldaro’s blog, gives some sense of this.
Post-2008, the US was the
first country to undertake Quantitative Easing in substantial scale, and both
of the most recent rallies (08/09 and 09/10) in the US Dollar ended just before
the beginnings of QE1 and QE 2. While the US was the first in, now
numerous countries have copied this playbook and enacted their own versions of
QE (e.g. Draghi’s actions since taking over the ECB) and other market
interventions (e.g. Brazil introduced capital controls to stop the realstrengthening, only to ditch them just over a year later as the Real started to tumble).
Furthermore, this comes at a time when the Fed is discussing when to start
reducing their ongoing QE, not whether to do more…or, in other words, being the
first-out of the QE/manipulation game. Ironically, after all the claims
of emerging market’s superiority to the Developed world in a post-08 world, and
their protests when the Fed started QE, it is of course the emerging economies that are seen as vulnerable to QE,
something that’s already been seen in the spectacular currency moves in both India and Brazil
over the last few months. A second argument for US Dollar strength is the
energy boom that’s beginning to occur in the US. Oil imports represent 40% of the US’ trade
deficit and a reduction in this need to import oil will help reduce the trade
deficit, resulting in fewer dollars head overseas (i.e. reduced supply of
dollars) to help fund reserves and meet any US$-based obligations. Thus, unless there’s a sharp change in the
demand for US-dollars, then it would suggest that the reduced supply would lead
to an increase in the dollar.
So why the Euro and the
Australian Dollar? Our Man thinks they represent interesting
opportunities, for different reasons. The Australian dollar has been a
big beneficiary of the China-driven commodity boom, with Australia’s exports to
China going up almost 8-fold in the decade 2001-2011 driven by commodities
(e.g. Iron ore & concentrates exports increased from A$1.4bn to A$44bn over the same time period).
Given Our Man’s bearish view on China, and by extension commodities, it’s easy
to see why being long the USD versus the Australian dollar is a large part of
the China thesis book. To help offset the risk that Our Man is wrong, and
that China could fund another stimulus (like 2009) which will once more boost
their domestic demand and need for commodities, Our Man has a small long
position in Chinese A-Shares as with the crackdown on various banking products,
the domestic equity market could also benefit from such a stimulus (like the US
equity market has since QE started).
With Europe’s economy still
fragile, especially in the periphery, the probability is that monetary policy
will remain accommodative there even after the Fed has started to taper.
However, the size of the long USD vs. Euro position, in the Currencies book,
overstates the portfolio’s exposure to this position as the European equity
exposure partially counteracts this (i.e. those ETFs are long Euro, short
USD). This European periphery exposure (in the Other Equities book)
represents the second largest exposure within the portfolio. It is also
the riskiest, given the magnitude of potential losses in the instruments
held. While Our Man expects the economic and political newsflow from
Europe to continue to be somewhere between mediocre and bad, it’s both unlikely
to be disastrous and also largely priced in. As befits positions that are
likely to be held for the long-term (read: multi-year), little has changed since Our Man entered the positions at the beginning of the year;
peripheral Europe is somewhere between very cheap (Spain and Italy) and
extremely cheap (Greece) on long-term measures of value. While these are
positions that are going to be held for a multi-year period, they are also
particularly volatile and so the position sizes will be changed more regularly
(i.e. a couple/few times a year, so don’t expect much ‘trading’). With
Greece & Spain both seeming to have put in long-term bottoms (in mid-late
2012) and having a favourable technical picture, they’re sized noticeably
larger than Italy. It should be noted that, as the ever astute Josh Brown observes,
this positive view on Europe that has steadily started to become more
prevalent, during 2013.
Elsewhere, the risks in the
portfolio are relatively limited. The Absolute Return Funds book
represents a decent amount of capital, but its risk is much smaller – something
that can be seen by its limited negative contribution despite the large recent
run-up in bond yields. The Value Equities book, probably carries more
risk in its 2 positions with both THRX (further drug approvals) and DRWI
(orders for build-out of 4G) having important events occurring over the next
6-12mos. Finally, the total exposure in the Alternative Energy,
Puts/Hedges and NCAV books is minimal at this point.
No comments:
Post a Comment