want to let you in on a secret.
It’s something all the best professional traders know, but few “little guys” take advantage of in the markets.
But if you’re one of these elite few, you can grab some significant profits on every market crisis, every black swan event, every time the markets go a little haywire… on days like last week when the Dow fell over 400 points before lunch.
It’s the secret to crisis currency investing, and it’s worked through all the major market upheavals for the last 15 years.
Let me show you how it’s done…
Asian Financial Crisis =
In July of 1997, the world saw the beginning of what would become a famous financial contagion, the Asian financial crisis.
It started inThailand, where a sudden crisis of confidence caused the collapse of the local currency, the Thai baht.
At the time, several Thai companies were holding massive amounts of debt denominated in foreign currency. So when the local currency lost half its value, those debts basically doubled in a very short amount of time.
Default was the only way out forThailand. Then came a massive wave of bankruptcies and layoffs.
One month later the same thing happened inIndonesia.
And that was just the beginning. By October, the crisis had spread toHong Kong,South Korea,Malaysia,Laosand thePhilippines.
The effects of the crisis lingered for a couple of years. In thePhilippines, for example, growth dropped to virtually zero in 1998.
But whileAsiasuffered, currency traders cleaned up. Let me show you how.
Exotic Currencies Act the
The Asian crisis is just one example of an economic downturn in emerging markets.
In the 90s we also had the Mexican peso crisis, where the Mexican peso devalued overnight. Then we watched asRussiadefaulted.
All these crises have something in common: as the emerging market economy sunk into crisis, the local currency collapsed.
The Korean won, for example, fell from 886 won per dollar to 1701 won per dollar in about six months. The Mexican peso crashed from 4 pesos to the dollar to 7.2 to the dollar in the space of a week.
Fast forward to 2008, and we saw that emerging market currencies react the same way, even though the crisis started in theU.S.
We all know that emerging markets had very little to do with the 2008 financial crisis. And yet, emerging market currencies got crushed when the stock market crashed.
It’s easy to see why.
When market sentiment is good, investors want to shoot for higher gains. They are willing to take chances and invest in a bit more exotic markets.
So investment capital flows to emerging markets when stocks are rallying overall.
But when there’s a major risk event, investors do not hesitate to pull their money out of those countries to invest in something safer.
SinceU.S.stocks peaked last month, for example, emerging market currencies have been taking a dive. The Turkish lira has fallen 9.4%, the South African rand 7.2%, and the Hungarian forint 4.3%.
The Mexican peso provides another example. TheU.S.stock market has crashed in the past few weeks because of fears theU.S.economy is heading into another recession. Like other emerging market currencies, the peso has also plunged in recent days.
It’s something all the best professional traders know, but few “little guys” take advantage of in the markets.
But if you’re one of these elite few, you can grab some significant profits on every market crisis, every black swan event, every time the markets go a little haywire… on days like last week when the Dow fell over 400 points before lunch.
It’s the secret to crisis currency investing, and it’s worked through all the major market upheavals for the last 15 years.
Let me show you how it’s done…
Asian Financial Crisis =
Opportunities in Currencies
In July of 1997, the world saw the beginning of what would become a famous financial contagion, the Asian financial crisis.It started inThailand, where a sudden crisis of confidence caused the collapse of the local currency, the Thai baht.
At the time, several Thai companies were holding massive amounts of debt denominated in foreign currency. So when the local currency lost half its value, those debts basically doubled in a very short amount of time.
Default was the only way out forThailand. Then came a massive wave of bankruptcies and layoffs.
One month later the same thing happened inIndonesia.
And that was just the beginning. By October, the crisis had spread toHong Kong,South Korea,Malaysia,Laosand thePhilippines.
The effects of the crisis lingered for a couple of years. In thePhilippines, for example, growth dropped to virtually zero in 1998.
But whileAsiasuffered, currency traders cleaned up. Let me show you how.
Exotic Currencies Act the
Same in Times of Crisis
The Asian crisis is just one example of an economic downturn in emerging markets.In the 90s we also had the Mexican peso crisis, where the Mexican peso devalued overnight. Then we watched asRussiadefaulted.
All these crises have something in common: as the emerging market economy sunk into crisis, the local currency collapsed.
The Korean won, for example, fell from 886 won per dollar to 1701 won per dollar in about six months. The Mexican peso crashed from 4 pesos to the dollar to 7.2 to the dollar in the space of a week.
Fast forward to 2008, and we saw that emerging market currencies react the same way, even though the crisis started in theU.S.
We all know that emerging markets had very little to do with the 2008 financial crisis. And yet, emerging market currencies got crushed when the stock market crashed.
It’s easy to see why.
When market sentiment is good, investors want to shoot for higher gains. They are willing to take chances and invest in a bit more exotic markets.
So investment capital flows to emerging markets when stocks are rallying overall.
But when there’s a major risk event, investors do not hesitate to pull their money out of those countries to invest in something safer.
SinceU.S.stocks peaked last month, for example, emerging market currencies have been taking a dive. The Turkish lira has fallen 9.4%, the South African rand 7.2%, and the Hungarian forint 4.3%.
The Mexican peso provides another example. TheU.S.stock market has crashed in the past few weeks because of fears theU.S.economy is heading into another recession. Like other emerging market currencies, the peso has also plunged in recent days.