Carry trade: Difference between revisions

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{{d|Carry trade|/ˈkæri treɪd/|n|}}
{{d|Carry trade|/ˈkæri treɪd/|n|}}


A transaction where one takes advantage of the market’s ''present'' opinion about its own future — most commonly expressed through the prism of the [[futures]] market, where that opinion is that an asset’s price will rise at a rate greater than one can borrow the cash required to buy it.  
A transaction where one takes advantage of the market’s ''present'' opinion about its own future — most commonly expressed through the prism of the [[futures]] market where that opinion is that an asset’s price will rise at a rate greater than one can borrow the cash required to buy it.  


“[[Positive carry]]” describes the state of affairs when the expected return on an asset is greater than the cost of owning it — being the implied cost of financing it, as well as actual costs of [[Custody|holding]] it and ensuring — ''in''suring — you don’t lose it. This means you can do a carry trade: borrow money to buy the asset and arrange to sell it forward later, and pay down your loan.
“[[Positive carry]]” describes the state of affairs when the the implied cost of financing an asset, as well as actual costs of [[Custody|holding]] it and ensuring — ''in''suring — you don’t lose is less that the rate at which the asset appreciates. This means you can do a “carry trade”: borrow money to buy the asset now, immediately arrange to sell it at its forward price later, hold the asset for its term, and pay down your loan with the sale proceeds you receive at the end.
 
===Yen carry trade===
{{image|yen carry|png|}}Hence, the famous “[[yen carry trade]]”, in fashion in that period in the noughties where ¥ interest rates were low or even negative, and, for example, New Zealand Dollar interest rates were around seven percent. Since the kiwi was not depreciating against JPY at 7 percent per annum, good money could be had by borrowing yen and buying kiwi. This was a good trade ''as long as the JPY/NZD exchange rate didn’t tank. During 2000 and 2007, not only did the kiwi not tank against the yen but, to the contrary the yen tanked against the Kiwi, largely because so many people were borrowing Yen and selling it to buy Kiwi. So not only did you lock in a 7% interest rate for the best part of a decade, you only had to pay back half of the principal you borrowed in the first place. When the Yen then rallied 98% in the next 18 months, a few people might have taken a bath, but even then the rate nebver got back to its historic high


If you can see that the spot price of an asset today is lower than its forward price (as implied by the futures price) — that is, the forward curve is in “[[contango]]” — by an amount greater than your [[cost of funding]], then all you have to do to make money is  
If you can see that the spot price of an asset today is lower than its forward price (as implied by the futures price) — that is, the forward curve is in “[[contango]]” — by an amount greater than your [[cost of funding]], then all you have to do to make money is  

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