Why correlation of EURUSD and USDCHF is usually high?

Discussion in 'Trading' started by OddTrader, Nov 15, 2006.

  1. Now I can remember a reading long time ago about:

    1. The banks in Switzerland own a lot of USD deposited by wealthy foreigners. This produces very high correlation.

    2. People owning US dollars will switch/convert USD to Switzerland as CHF if USD is getting weak/ strong. This makes negatively correlated.

    Comments?
     
    #11     Nov 15, 2006
  2. hcour

    hcour Guest

    In Kathy Lien's book "Daytrading the Currency Market" she says that the CHF is correlated w/Gold (according to CSI, +77 the last 10 yrs) while Gold is inversely correlated to the Dollar (CSI, -73 last 10 yrs). She also writes:

    The Swiss Franc moves primarily on external events rather than domestic economic conditions. This is due to its political neutrality, the franc is considered the world's premier safe-haven currency. Therefore, in times of global instability and/or uncertainty, investors tend to be more concerned with capital retention than appreciation. At such times, funds will flow into Switzerland...

    Good stuff. She does a great job analyzing the specific forces that drive each major currency.

    H
     
    #12     Nov 15, 2006
  3. Many thanks. That probably should be quite reasonable fundamanetal reasons, besides other technical trading issues.
     
    #13     Nov 15, 2006
  4. Sure. The post to which I replied was, in its entirety:

    I replied "That is incorrect", referring to both sentences.

    The "both in Eurozone" factor explains the "highly correlated" (here "nearly 100%") part of the OP's question -- but in a major, not secondary / contributing way.

    The "inverse" factor -- direct vs. indirect quoting convention, in dollar terms -- helps explain only the "inversely" (negatively signed) part of the OP's question, and nothing else. It has nothing to do with the nearly 100%, highly correlated part.

    In general, as mentioned, the direct vs. indirect quoting convention helps determine only the sign of the correlation between any two pairs (more likely to be negative over time), not its degree / magnitude (how weak or strong it's going to be). Many oppositely quoted pairs are weakly correlated, well under 50% in absolute value. For example, over the last 100 days, GBP/USD correlations with USD/CHF, USD/JPY, USD/CAD and USD/ZAR are -0.12, 0.14, -0.27, -0.01, respectively.
     
    #14     Nov 15, 2006