Greg Newton

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Great 2007 Quant Meltdown Memorial Edition

It’s been a while since the phrase “carry trade” has been bandied about in polite society, so NakedShorts thought that he’d take his just-enough-math-to-be dangerous and mark the more-or-less anniversary of the Great 2007 Quant Meltdown with a little figurin’. Yowzah!

Using the daily percentage moves in SPY as a proxy for the US stock market, and in FXY, the Japanese currency ETF that now has almost $1 billion in assets as a proxy for the yen, over the not quite 12 months from Aug. 6 2007 to Aug. 1 2008 (a date range selected on the very scientific principle that it’s all Google Finance would allow me to download without a major fist fight):

  • The two instruments are about as negatively correlated as it gets, racking up a score of -64.95.
  • Out of 251 trading days, SPY went up or was flat on 124 of them. On those days, FXY managed gains on just 39.
  • On the 129 days when FXY went up or was flat, SPY managed gains on just...39. Again.

It’s possible that this is a long-standing relationship dating back to long before this data-set, so just take this for what it’s worth (2¢). Although it seems reasonable that if someone knows what the US stock market is going do on a given day, doing the exact opposite in FXY would be a reasonably profitable proposition, even accounting for gappage-related friction burns.

Of course, if someone knows what the US stock market is going to do on a given day, they’re probably not reading these pixels. And if they do happen by, please contact the grinning idiot on the right.

This article has 1 comment:

  •  
    Aug 08 11:15 AM
    I enjoyed your column and particularly the humor about knowing what the market will do on any given day. Have there been other studies on US stock market versus foreign exchange dating back over a longer time period?
    Reply
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