Shorting the Japanese yen while going long equities was a consensus trade last year. The pair have decoupled, but can the trade work again? Tilney Bestinvest's Sophie Muller investigates.
There has long been a strong, negative correlation between Japanese equities and the Japanese yen. This relationship intensified last year following the introduction in April of the Bank of Japan’s aggressive Quantitative and Qualitative Monetary Easing (QQE) programme as part of the reform package dubbed Abenomics. Indeed, one of the major consensus trades of last year was buy Japanese equities, sell the currency. This trade was very beneficial for a lot of investors, as the Topix 150 index surged, increasing by 54% in local currency terms for the whole of 2013, while the yen weak...
To continue reading this article...
Join Investment Week for free
- Unlimited access to real-time news, analysis and opinion from the investment industry, including the Sustainable Hub covering fund news from the ESG space
- Get ahead of regulatory and technological changes affecting fund management
- Important and breaking news stories selected by the editors delivered straight to your inbox each day
- Weekly members-only newsletter with exclusive opinion pieces from leading industry experts
- Be the first to hear about our extensive events schedule and awards programmes