Monday 4 April 2011

The Aussie, the Kiwi and the Loonie- will the good old days of two or three to the pound return?

GBP/AUD: 1.56

GBP/NZD: 2.10

GBP/CAD: 1.56

These are the current interbank rates for sterling against the aussie, the kiwi and the loonie (Canadian dollar). Four years ago, one pound would buy you two and half aussie dollars, almost three kiwi dollars, and well over two Canadian dollars. These levels are reflective of historically riskier currencies versus the size and safety of the UK economy in years gone by. So, will we see these sorts of levels again or must be consigned to a new trading range?

In the case of the export-driven Australian and New Zealand economies, these have benefitted on a huge scale from the rise of China. Now the world’s second largest economy, China is a major trading partner to these two antipodean nations, and with commodity prices so high, their currencies have appreciated strongly. The higher interest rates of these two economies has for the past few years also provided investors with a far higher yield than those available in the UK, the US or Japan for example. This interest rate differential is set to be maintained for at least the next couple of years to come. The global recession hit the UK far harder than either Australia or New Zealand and it will take some time yet before a full recovery is established and it cope with fully normalised monetary policy (ie higher interest rates).

The loonie has also had reason to perform well, though for different reasons. Canada’s economy has benefitted from a broad rise in oil prices and from improving conditions in the US economy, its main trading partner. Canada’s economic fundamentals are solid – far more so than the UK’s - and the loonie had appreciated against the pound despite having equally low central bank interest rates.

None of the factors that have caused these ‘growth-linked’ currencies to appreciate against the pound, particularly the strength of the world’s two largest economies, look likely to fade any time soon. It would therefore be of huge surprise even in the long term to see a return of the levels of four years ago. The outlook for the British economy, in comparison to the “riskier” ones discussed above, looks distinctly pessimistic. With UK suffering economic contraction in the last quarter of 2010 and continuing to struggle with persistently high inflation, it might be argued that sterling is presently a riskier currency than the aussie dollar on a fundamental level. The day the pound has fully regained, for instance the near 40% it has lost against the aussie in the past 4 years, looks a very long way off indeed.

Although we actually view sterling to be undervalued at present (many others do not), it certainly appears that the current lowly trading ranges are set to continue for some time.

Richard Driver
Analyst – Caxton FX


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