We still have 44 % of
our Australian dollar exposure and 31 % of our Swiss franc exposure hedged.
Not exact matches
As of quarter - end, approximately 73 % of the Fund's
Australian dollar, 68 % of the Swiss franc, 69 % of the Japanese yen, 20 % of the Swedish krona and 13 % of the euro
exposures were hedged.
As of quarter - end, approximately 63 % of the Fund's
Australian dollar, 62 % of the Japanese yen, 42 % of the Swiss franc and 37 % the Swedish krona
exposures were hedged.
At the recent quarter end, we had hedged 26 % of the Fund's
Australian dollar, 42 % of the Norwegian krone, 36 % of the Swiss franc and 16 % of the Swedish krona
exposures.
We continue to hedge the portfolio defensively and currently have hedging positions on a portion of the Fund's
Australian dollar, Japanese yen, Swiss franc and Swedish krona
exposures.
As of the recent quarter end, we increased the Fund's
Australian dollar hedge to 37 %, and have 47 % of the Norwegian krone and 34 % of the Swiss franc
exposures hedged.
As of September 30, we decreased the Fund's
Australian dollar hedge to 10 %, the Norwegian krone to 11 % and the Swiss franc to 22 % of the
exposures hedged.
The currency
exposure that arises from owning foreign stocks is not hedged back to
Australian dollars.
As of the recent quarter end, the Fund's
Australian dollar and Norwegian krone hedges decreased to 23 % and 10 %, respectively, and with the currency movement due to the unpegging of the Swiss franc to the euro in January 2015, our Swiss franc
exposure increased slightly to 29 %.
As of quarter end we hedged 33 % of the
Australian dollar, 33 % of the Swiss franc and 30 % of the Swedish krona
exposure.
At the recent quarter end, we had hedged 35 % of the Fund's
Australian dollar, 51 % of the Norwegian krone, 25 % of the Swiss franc, 7 % of the Japanese yen and 30 % of the Swedish krona
exposures.
CCA's cost increases are lower than those at Schweppes because CCA pays for soft drink concentrate in
Australian dollars rather than US
dollars and hedges its commodity and currency
exposure.
Companies with
exposure to foreign earnings have been beneficiaries of the wilting
Australian dollar and are expected to outperform the broader market this year again as their earnings growth gains momentum.
UBS sees opportunity in cyclical companies that have
exposure to the US
dollar, given their recent underperformance despite the lower
Australian dollar.
In terms of currency effects, the
Australian dollar appreciated against all the major currencies that the Fund has
exposure to.
Bethesda, MD, July 19, 2012 — ProShares, a premier provider of alternative exchange traded funds (ETFs), announced today the launch of ProShares Ultra
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Dollar (NYSE: CROC), the first ETFs in the U.S. providing magnified or inverse
exposure to the
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