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While dollar correlations are expected to remain firm, they are expensive to trade directly. A more effective strategy is to target the underperforming cross-correlation space. Sterling cross-correlations, for example, are trading significantly below their implied levels, offering a cheaper way to express the core view.

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Analysts expect a continued dollar-centric market where most G10 currencies move in tandem against the dollar, keeping dollar correlations high. However, they are bearish on cross-correlations (e.g., involving Sterling and Euro), anticipating greater divergence between non-dollar currencies, which presents an opportunity for investors.

Unlike emerging markets where pro-cyclical trades are crowded, positioning data shows the bearish US dollar view is not widely held in G10 currencies. This lack of a broad consensus short means there is less risk of a sharp deleveraging, giving pro-cyclical G10 FX more room to appreciate against the dollar.

With dollar correlations at elevated levels, finding cheap, clean directional expressions against the dollar is challenging. Sophisticated traders are creating bearish dollar baskets that mix G10 currencies (AUD, NOK) with Emerging Market currencies (HUF, ZAR) to achieve greater pricing efficiency.

Sterling's ability to hold its value against the dollar, even as other high-yield currencies weakened after the strong U.S. payrolls data, suggests the market is still heavily short the currency. This price action serves as a key indicator that positioning, not just fundamentals, is a primary driver for the pound.

From a systematic trading perspective, Sterling (GBP) holds a unique position among G10 currencies. It is the only one that allows investors to earn significant carry (yield) without the high sensitivity to commodity price swings (terms of trade) that affects currencies like the Norwegian Krone or Australian Dollar, making it a distinct choice for yield-seeking strategies.

Instead of directly shorting the US dollar, which can be costly, traders can use the Canadian dollar (CAD) as a more profitable proxy. This approach offers a better "carry" advantage due to interest rate differentials, while still capturing the downside of a weakening USD, especially as the Bank of Canada's policy mirrors the Fed's dovishness.

With FX volatility at multi-year lows, traditional volatility-selling strategies are not recommended. Instead, the optimal approach is to use options to exploit specific currency pairs with exceptionally high carry-to-volatility ratios, such as Sterling/Swiss, for superior alpha generation.

Despite high Euro risk reversals against the dollar, J.P. Morgan identifies a broad underperformance in Euro skew, particularly in LATAM crosses like EUR/BRL and EUR/MXN. This dislocation creates an attractive setup for volatility harvesting strategies, such as selling topside Euro calls through delta-hedged structures.

With traditional carry trades (selling volatility) becoming difficult, an alternative strategy is to harvest skew premiums. This involves targeting currency pairs where option markets overstate the potential for realized skew, such as in crosses like EUR/MXN, to avoid direct exposure to a hawkish US Fed.

A bearish Canadian dollar (CAD) position can act as a superior proxy for a bearish US dollar (USD) view. It provides insulation against temporary USD rallies (as USD/CAD rises) and offers better carry efficiency due to the Bank of Canada's dovish stance, making it a lower-beta, potentially higher-return strategy.

Trade Underperforming Sterling Cross-Correlations as a Proxy for Expensive Dollar Correlation Views | RiffOn