As Central Banks Mull Pullback
of Easy Money, Investors Turn to Relatively Stable European Currency
By MATTHEW
WALTER and NICOLE
HONG
The euro is emerging as an
unlikely oasis in the latest bout of market turmoil.
Assets ranging from Japanese
stocks to emerging-market bonds to U.S. Treasurys have slumped this spring, as
investors brace for the possible pullback from easy-money policies by the
world's major central banks. But the euro has largely avoided the volatile
trading that has whipsawed other currencies, including the dollar and the
Japanese yen, gaining about 4% against the greenback over the past four weeks
to trade late Friday at $1.3345, near a four-month high.
It is a dramatic reversal for
a currency that frequently has been at the center of global market turmoil in
the past few years. Investors had put on record bets that the euro would fall,
fueled by Europe's economic slump and questions about the long-term viability
of the currency union.
Bearish euro positions have
tumbled 90% in the past two weeks, according to the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission. Despite problems that include stunted European economic growth,
rising unemployment and large debt loads in southern European economies, many
investors say the euro is a relatively safe bet these days, thanks to its
status as a heavily traded reserve currency and ebbing fears of an imminent
crisis.
The prospect of an early end
to Federal Reserve stimulus has prompted many traders to hastily unwind bets on
emerging markets and other high-yielding assets. As these positions unravel,
some investors are taking shelter in the euro, which they see as having more in
common with havens such as the dollar and yen than riskier, more thinly traded,
higher-yielding currencies like the Australian dollar.
"It's hard to bet against
the euro," said Sam Katzman, chief investment officer for New York-based
Constellation Wealth Advisors, which invests about $5 billion in various funds
on behalf of clients. "Until we stop printing money in the U.S., or they
start, the wind is at the back of the euro."
Driving the euro's strength is
an unwinding of the "carry trade," in which investors borrow a
low-yielding currency like the euro, sell it and then use the proceeds to buy
higher-yielding assets like U.S. stocks and Mexican bonds. Carry trades, which
helped power solid gains in riskier asset classes for the past few years, rely
on a steady interest-rate differential to make money.


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