Me? I'm not decided - I struggle at the best of times to understand currency drivers no matter how many times I read them.. Forex trading always seems such a mirky pool to me; so much sentiment, so much daily trading, such tiny daily margins (unlike normal investors - traders trade currency to 4 or 5 decimal places) so much on the US economy, deficit, imports from China and a balance of payments ranging from cr@p to apolcalyptic and that deminishing shades of 'bad' are in fact 'good'..? All quite barmy army..
Nonetheless the $:£ can be a reality for investors - I saw many investors lose money out of good funds because they were exposed to multiple currencies ($:€ and so on) - so I helped my old firm devise better risk models for seeding and investing hedged currency products to be more 'resiliant' to FX and money flows.. so wake up and smell the exchange rate folks - understand interest rate differentials and make it work for you or at least make sure you are bloody well hedged against FX risk , mitigated somehow or able to perform alchemy and avoid it altogether!!!
'Resiliance' [is a term describing how quickly the price volatility of a fund/investment normalises after an inflow/outflow]. Closely related to 'market depth' which is the susceptibility to such movements from outset.Action plan: Just look at your portfolio - check how it's invested, in what currency it's denominated, invested and where.. even think about where the underlying stocks or fund invest.. US/overseas - does the fund manager mitigate FX at the portfolio level. If you have an ETF then be extra sure you are not exposed to currency risk or look for currency ETFs to hedge your position or avoid ETFs that are bought in one currency and trade in another.. Just know your position and have a plan.
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