Investing in Currencies

Why worrying about currency swings will hurt your investments


Bears claim you should fear US dollar “weakness”. They claim its 2025 plunge against the soaring euro, Swiss franc, British pound and other currencies reveal investors are increasingly fleeing US assets amid “risky” policy moves, US Federal Reserve independence fears and more. Exports of strong currency nations risk getting whacked, they say, claiming it all will slam economies, your wallet and global stocks.

Wrong. Despite common claims, developed nation currency swings predict little. Certainly not stocks’ direction. They never have. Neither is 2025’s dollar weakness – the core of current currency consternation – very unusual.

Weak or strong, currencies always scare people. When strong, they supposedly hammer corporate profits on exports or risk deflation.

A strong US dollar often triggers default fears in developing nations. They often borrow in dollars and a rising buck makes interest payments harder to meet.

Weak currencies are also feared fatal for stocks, making imports more expensive and stoking inflation. So, pick your 2025 poison.

The strong euro has surged 13 per cent surge against the dollar, the pound 7 per cent and the franc’s 14 per cent (all as of September 29). Conversely, the weak dollar has dropped 11.7 per cent, 6.7 per cent and 12 per cent against those respective currencies – and 9.8 per cent against a trade-weighted basket of currencies. All these big swings incur risk, bears cry!

The data disagrees. Consider the US for its long, accurate history: US stocks have risen in 44 of 56 years since 1968. They were split near-evenly between times the dollar strengthened (24 years) and weakened (20 years). When stocks fell, the greenback rose in six years and fell in six years. Can’t see any pattern? That is because there isn’t one.

For strong currency fears, consider the euro: eurozone stocks rose in 18 years since its 1999 debut. Of those, it strengthened against a 41-nation currency basket in 12 years – the most common result. It weakened in six, the same frequency as a stronger euro coincided with falling stocks, meaning there is no pattern.