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Hedging Exposure In Risky Times: Bank Of Singapore
Editorial Staff
3 June 2019
Investors are likely to focus strongly on how to hedge against the damaging impact of rising US tariffs against China and other nations, said in a recent note. And, although gold hasn’t performed strongly of late, its price could go up if trade tensions worsen.
Taking a short (ie, negative bet) against a basket of Asian currencies (Chinese renminbi, aka yuan, Korean won, Taiwan dollar and Singapore dollar) is, for the moment, the most effective hedging ploy, Sim Moh Siong, currency strategist at the bank, said in a note.
“Concerns that China has more to lose than the US from escalating trade tension has put CNY is only down 5 per cent from its early May high, reinforcing the perception that “China loses more than America”, although the latter’s relative resilience (vis-à-vis China equity market) may be starting to erode,” Bank of Singapore continued.
“Second, a key driver of gold is real interest rates. Falling real rates, which lowers the opportunity cost of owning gold, is typically gold positive. However, the fall in US nominal yields since early May has not buoyed gold, as the bulk of the decline is driven by so-called breakeven inflation rates (an indication of the rate of expected prices in the future derived from inflation-indexed bonds) rather than real rates,” the bank said.