Currency Hedging Over Long Horizons
40 Pages Posted: 14 Jan 2001 Last revised: 29 Nov 2022
Date Written: May 1993
Abstract
This paper reexamines the widely-held wisdom that the currency exposure of international investments should be entirely hedged. It finds that the previously documented ability of hedges to reduce portfolio return variance holds at short horizons, but not at long horizons. At horizons of several years, complete hedging not only does not lower return variance, it actually increases the return variance of many portfolios. Hedge ratios chosen to minimize long-run return variance are not only low, they also have no perceptible impact on return variance. The paper reports and explores these results, their apparent causes, and investigates their implications for hedging practice.
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Change in Market Assessments of Deposit-Institution Riskiness
By Edward J. Kane and Haluk Unal
-
The Sensitivity of Bank Stock Returns to Market, Interest and Exchange Rate Risks
By Jongmoo Jay Choi, Elyas Elyasiani, ...
-
By Gary B. Gorton and Richard J. Rosen
-
By Elyas Elyasiani and Iqbal Mansur
-
Modeling Structural and Temporal Variation in the Market's Valuation of Banking Firms
By Edward J. Kane and Haluk Unal
-
The Exchange Rate Exposure of U.S. And Japanese Banking Institutions
By Helen Popper, Sandra Chamberlain, ...
-
Derivative Exposure and the Interest Rate and Exchange Rate Risks of U.S. Banks
By Elyas Elyasiani and Jongmoo Jay Choi
-
Risk and Market Segmentation in Financial Intermediaries' Returns
By Linda Allen and Julapa Jagtiani
-
Asymmetric Information, Dividend Reductions, and Contagion Effects in Bank Stock Returns
By Wolfgang Bessler and Tom Nohel