2023 is nearing its end, and it has been a strong year for currency investing, with strategies such as FX carry gaining over 20% into December. That has occurred as most central banks have conducted the sharpest tightening cycles on record with inflationary trends proving tougher to budge and economies tougher to solve than first thought. Now, with 2024 outlooks released, investors are positioning for the incoming year’s themes. Central bank cutting cycles are expected to take centre stage. That is in part due to the expectation of widespread recessions. However, the risk of dormant inflationary issues reappearing remains.
Sell-side analysts expect the dollar to weaken in this environment (Chart 1). AUD (+6.0%) and JPY (+5.9%) are forecasted to rally the most. Meanwhile, CAD (+1.7%) is forecasted to lag its peers.

However, investors appear unconvinced. Crown Global Markets positioning data shows that investors are only net bullish one currency: EUR (versus USD). And, even here, there is not widespread agreement with this bullishness driven by outsized asset manager net longs, which more than offset leveraged funds net shorts. Otherwise, the only other bullishness can be found in leveraged fund GBP net longs.
We reach similar conclusions studying changes to positioning over the past month. EUR net positioning saw the only outright bullish change as asset managers added to net longs while leveraged funds closed net shorts. CAD positioning saw marginally less bearish positioning. Meanwhile, changes to leveraged fund and asset manager net positioning offset each other in GBP, CHF and NZD. They were outright bearish in JPY and NZD.
So, as we approach 2024, asset managers like to be long EUR, and short all other currencies, AUD and CAD the most, while leveraged funds like to be long GBP, and short all other currencies, JPY and CAD the most. Both are positioned for JPY weakness.
We are unconvinced that the Federal Reserve will cut in 2024, while we think cuts across most G10 central banks are near guaranteed. As a result, the dollar is unlikely to depreciate by as much as expected, which is similar to what investors appear to be positioning for, except for EUR. Furthermore, and focusing on JPY, given weak private domestic demand, already peaked inflation, and wage growth only normalising, it will be hard to envision JPY finding room to rally against the dollar. Instead, USD/JPY is likely to inch higher, which investors are also positioning for.


Option strikes
Investors that express trades in FX options align closer with sell-side analysts than us and the market. According to Crown Global Markets data on option strikes:
There is notable net demand for USD/JPY puts from 145 and as far south as 122. The main concentration of put demand is found 139.
Demand for USD/JPY calls is weaker but more bunched. Over 90% are concentrated between 146 and 154, just an eight-figure range.
What to watch: A return to normality for the yen requires either dollar downside or BoJ monetary policy tightening. Given the recent less dovish commentary from BoJ board members, we will watch the 19 December BoJ meeting for hints of future normalisation.

FX investor risk appetite
Crown Global Markets has a range of FX volatility data to help investors track the level of volatility. We can also use FX volatility data to determine investor risk appetite. We find the shape of the FX volatility curve useful in this regard. When shorter-dated FX implied volatility is higher than longer-dated volatility, this suggests investors are worried or in “panic” mode. In contrast, when shorter-dated FX volatility is lower than longer-dated volatility, this suggests investors expect calm markets. The latest data finds:
The FX volatility curve has reversed over half a years’ worth of flattening (Chart 5). This suggests that while investors remain net-calm, they are becoming less comfortable in their conviction into year end.
The move aligns with Crown Global Markets volatility indices, which have followed a similar dynamic, trading near year lows.
Outside FX, equity volatility remains historically low, while rates volatility has crept lower but remains historically high.

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