Non-US investors and ETF currencies

Among the considerations for non-US investors investing through ETFs is the effect of currency risk on returns. The issue can be particularly difficult to untangle where an ETF might have different denomination and trading currencies, perhaps neither of which is the same as either the investor's home currency or the currency of the assets held by the ETF.

This page demonstrates why it is that for investors in these ETFs, the only currency exchange rate that impacts long term returns is the one between the investor's home currency and the currency of the ETF's assets. Any other currencies involved in the ETF, either internally or for trading purposes, are irrelevant.

Introduction
Non-US investors are frequently faced with a choice of investing through ETFs that have a bewildering set of currencies associated with them.

An ETF will typically have a denomination currency, and then one or more trading currencies. The denomination currency is the currency in which the ETF's performance is reported, and is often also the currency in which dividends are paid. The trading currencies are those with which the investor can buy and sell ETF shares, and usually align with the currency or currencies associated with the exchange(s) on which the ETF trades.

Alongside this, the investor will themselves have a home currency which may differ from the ETF's denomination and trading currencies, and the ETF will hold assets in a country which uses yet another different currency.

All of this means that there may be as many as four different currencies involved in a non-US investor's use of an ETF. The question then becomes, how much additional currency risk appears when all of these different currencies combine in this way?

Conceptual currency flows in ETF trades
The following diagram shows how funds might flow between currencies in an ETF purchase, and then later on in a sale.

In this example the ETF's denomination currency is the US Dollar (USD), and its trading currency is UK Pound Sterling (GBP). It tracks the Nikkei index and so holds Japanese stocks whose pricing currency is the Japanese Yen (JPY). We can consider two different potential investors, one whose home currency is GBP, the other from Europe and whose currency is the Euro (EUR).



While this diagram conceptually shows the ETF provider exchanging currencies and buying or selling Japanese stocks to create or destroy ETF shares, in practice they may -- and in fact, probably will not -- do all of these things.

Short explanation of currency effects
The short explanation of why all the intermediate currencies have no effect whatsoever on returns to the investor who buys an ETF holding Japanese stocks which are priced in JPY is that on purchase, the investor exchanges some of their local currency for an equivalent value of stocks priced in JPY, and on sale the reverse happens. In between purchase and sale, the investor holds only JPY assets, so other currencies besides the investor's own are irrelevant.

However, some people find this explanation insufficient or unconvincing. If this is you, read on. Even finance writers and investment professionals regularly get confused over this, so it is nothing to be embarrassed about.

Longer explanation of currency effects
There are two key realisations to understanding why the intermediate currencies in this ETF purchase and sale have no effect on the long term return to the investor:

Sterling investor and Nikkei tracker ETF example
Suppose a GBP investor buys a share in this example ETF. The provider conceptually exchanges GBP to obtain an amount in the ETF's denomination currency of USD, converts this amount to JPY, and then buys Japanese stocks. However, because currency markets are liquid and highly efficient, this GBP to USD to JPY transition produces the exact same result as a direct GBP to JPY exchange. For this investor then, the GBP to USD exchange rate plays no part in the outcome.

Similarly, when this investor sells their share, the provider conceptually exchanges currencies in the reverse direction. They sell Japanese stocks to realise JPY, convert this into a value expressed in the ETF's denomination currency of USD, and then return that to the investor as GBP. The GBP to USD exchange rate plays no part in the outcome here either, for the same reason as when buying.

In between buying and selling, this investor holds only assets valued in JPY, so their investment outcome results from combining the performance of the Nikkei index with the GBP to JPY exchange rate. No other currencies are involved.

Euro investor and Nikkei tracker ETF example
What about the Euro investor, who has to exchange from EUR to GBP to buy this ETF, and then back on sale?

Here again, the EUR to GBP exchange rate plays no part in the long term return to this investor. The EUR to GBP conversions on buy and sell will produce the same result as if directly between EUR and JPY for the same reasons as with USD above. Currency markets will ensure that on buying, the EUR to GBP conversion followed by GBP to JPY -- and the converse on sale -- will produce the same result as directly converting EUR to JPY.

Dividends paid in different currencies
Finally, what about ETF dividends paid out in a currency other than that of the investor?

Again, the only exchange rate that matters is that between JPY and the investor's currency, GBP or EUR in this example. The stocks in the ETF pay their dividends in JPY, and if the ETF provider chooses (perhaps for their own convenience) to distribute these to investors in USD, then again because of currency market efficiencies the conversion from JPY to USD and then on to GBP or EUR produces the same outcome as directly converting JPY to GBP or EUR.

Extension to the general case
The example shown uses the currencies GBP, EUR, USD and JPY to illustrate what might happen for one particular ETF, but the currencies selected here are not important, and the result is completely general. An investor might find an ETF whose trading and denomination currencies match their own, or one where only the denomination currency is different from their own, or one where both the trading and the denomination currency are different from their own.

In all three of these cases though, only the exchange rate between the investor's currency and the currency (or currencies) of the assets held by the ETF will impact long term performance. Any other currencies are simply accounting or trading conveniences.

An investor looking at their ETF's performance reported in a currency other than their own -- that is, where the ETF's denomination currency is different from the investor's currency -- must always convert performance or return figures into their own currency before interpreting the results. For example, a sudden gain of 100% in the value as shown in the denomination currency is less likely to mean that the assets have doubled in value than that the denomination currency has devalued by 50% relative to both the asset's currency and the investor's currency (imagine an ETF denominated in Zimbabwean dollars or Venezuelan bolivars!).

Worked example showing this in practice
To make this more concrete, here are some numbers from dates picked entirely at random (honestly!). Suppose an investor buys shares of this example Nikkei tracker ETF on 15 Jan 2010 and sells on 18 May 2018.

Purchase example
Notice however that £100 converted directly into JPY on this date is also exactly ¥14,738.77. The transit through USD had no effect.

Sale example
Again though, notice that ¥30,744.19 converted directly to GBP is also £206.24. So again, the transit through USD had no effect.

Long term (non-)effects
During the holding period the USD 'strengthened' so that GBP to USD rate changed from 1.623972 to 1.347573. At 17.01% this is a far larger currency effect than the 1.23% difference in GBP to JPY over the same period. However, this sizeable change in GBP to USD does not show up at all in the investor's long term returns here. It is nowhere in the numbers above.

Finally, to drive the point home, notice that if you multiply together the two example exchange rates that happen when transiting through USD, you get the third to within five decimal places. At purchase, 1.623972 × 90.757521 = 147.38767(2893), and at sale 0.742075 × 0.009031 = 0.00670(1679325).

Euro investor's outcome
What of the Euro investor who trades this ETF in GBP?

Had this same investor been able to convert directly from EUR to JPY their gain would have been the 108.79% Nikkei gain plus the minuscule gain from the EUR to JPY rate changing from 130.493893 to 130.390705. This is the same outcome as going via both GBP and USD.

Simple three currency case
Suppose three currencies A, B, and C. Let the exchange rates be such that Rab converts from A to B, Rbc from B to C, and Rac from A to C. Assume currency markets are fully liquid and perfectly efficient.

Exchanging an amount Va from currency A to Vc in currency C can be accomplished either directly as "Vc = Rac × Va" or indirectly as "Vc = (Rab × Va) × Rbc". Under the assumption that currency markets are perfectly efficient, these will always produce the same value of Vc. Therefore "(Rab × Va) × Rbc = Rac × Va".

Factoring out Va produces "Rab × Rbc = Rac". Currency B does not participate in Rac, so currency B and its relationship to any other currencies can be ignored in any situation where "Rab × Rbc" is applied.

For inverse conversions, because currency markets are perfectly efficient, "Rij = 1 / Rji" for all currency pairs formed by i and j. Thus "(1 / Rab) × (1 / Rbc) = 1 / Rac", equivalent to "Rcb × Rba = Rca".

An ETF may trade in currency A, be denominated in currency B, and hold assets in currency C. Because of the above three currency pattern, the ETF's denomination currency can be ignored since it plays no part in the ETF's return. Neither the conversion from A to C on purchase or the conversion from C to A on sale are affected by B.

Extension to more than three currencies
An ETF may hold assets valued in multiple currencies. Currency C and exchange rates Rbc and Rac become multiple element sets, and let currency set C be the currencies of the assets held by the ETF. For each set element indexed by i and forming the currency triple {A, B, Ci}, by applying the three currency pattern the relationship "Rab × Rbc i = Rac i " holds, such that currency B can be ignored for all i. And symmetrically, "Rc ib × Rba = Rc ia ".

An investor may need to convert their currency to the ETF's trading currency, producing a longer chain of exchanges. Suppose currencies A, B, C ... Z and rates Rab, Rbc ... Ryz, and Raz such that Rab converts A to B, Rbc converts B to C ..., and Raz converts A directly to Z. Suppose an arbitrary length chain of conversions such that "Vz = Rab × Rbc × ... × Ryz × Va". Repeated application of the three currency pattern reduces the chain of conversions to "Vz = Raz × Va", such that currencies B to Y can be ignored.

Caveats and details glossed over
All of the above makes the assumption that the ETF is not currency-hedged. If it is, this will significantly affect outcomes, either positively or negatively. In general, investors should probably avoid currency-hedged ETFs where the currency being hedged by the ETF is not the investor's currency, although one possible exception would be where the investor's currency is pegged to the currency hedged by the ETF.

It also ignores any costs or losses involved in actual currency exchanges. For conceptual currency exchanges that happen internally to the ETF, there either should be no actual costs involved, or if there are then the ETF provider will absorb them into the costs of running the ETF.

For real currency exchanges though, where the investor may not hold any of the currencies in which an ETF trades, there is an obvious loss to foreign currency exchange on both purchase and sale. Investors should probably prefer to buy and sell ETFs that trade in the currency they hold, at least as far as is possible. For other cases, it is likely to be best to exchange first into whichever of the available ETF trading currencies has the lowest conversion losses for the currency held.