On 9/10/07, Doug Henwood <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Sep 10, 2007, at 7:17 PM, Sabri Oncu wrote:
>
> For someone saving for retirement or some such, with a time horizon
> of 30-40 years, there's just no reason to try to outguess the market.
> "These days," for sure - if you mean the last month or two. If you
> mean the last three or four years? The last 20-25 years? The last
> 50-60 years?


How about a one year time frame?
Just came up on docuticker
http://www.docuticker.com/?p=16190

Global Currency Hedging
Source: Harvard Business School Working Papers

    This paper considers the risk management problem of an investor
who holds a diversified portfolio of global equities or bonds and
chooses long or short positions in currencies to manage the risk of
the total portfolio. Over the period 1975-2005, we find that a
risk-minimizing global equity investor should short the Australian
dollar, Canadian dollar, Japanese yen, and British pound but should
hold long positions in the US dollar, the euro, and the Swiss franc.
The resulting currency position tends to rise in value when equity
markets fall. This strategy works well for investment horizons of one
month to one year. In the past 15 years the risk-minimizing demand for
the dollar appears to have weakened slightly, while demands for the
euro and Swiss franc have strengthened. These changes may reflect the
growing role for the euro as a reserve currency in the international
financial system. The risk-minimizing currency strategy for a global
bond investor is close to a full currency hedge, with a modest long
position in the US dollar. Risk-reducing currencies have had lower
average returns during our sample period, but the difference in
average returns is smaller than would be implied by the global CAPM
given the historical equity premium.

Source: http://hbswk.hbs.edu/item/5716.html

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