Vanguard s&p 500 fund
Vanguard s&p 500 fund
Author
Discussion

Markno9

Original Poster:

2 posts

42 months

Wednesday 9th November 2022
quotequote all
Hi there

Apologies in advance if its a stupid question but In reference to this fund - Vanguard S&P 500 UCITS ETF (VUSA)

Its priced in GBP on the Vanguard UK website and my question is ...... what happens if the pound gets stronger against the dollar , does that impact this fund at all ? Or is it just priced in GBP and would be bought and sold in GBP ?

Thanks
Mark

bitchstewie

64,419 posts

234 months

Wednesday 9th November 2022
quotequote all
Look at VUSA v a US or $ priced S&P 500 tracker and you can see the difference the GBP value makes.

LeoSayer

7,713 posts

268 months

Wednesday 9th November 2022
quotequote all
Alternatively, compare a hedged fund with a non-hedged fund.

Non-hedged fund price in GBP = down 3.4% YTD
Hedged fund priced in GBP= down 19.5% YTD

https://www.morningstar.co.uk/uk/etf/snapshot/snap...
https://www.morningstar.co.uk/uk/etf/snapshot/snap...

Put simply, the hedged fund undertakes FX transactions that sell USD and buy GBP regardless of market sentiment. Year to date this will have created losses for the fund because of the strengthening USD, hence the poor performance of the hedged version.

If you feel that GBP will strengthen against the USD then you could buy the hedged version of the fund as above.

Personally, I've never bought a currency hedged equity fund.

Kickstart

1,111 posts

261 months

Saturday 12th November 2022
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I prefer investing in an unhedged S&P fund, as my uninformed take on matters is that the UK is likely to have higher rates of inflation that the US over the medium term, which everything being equal, is likely to mean the pound dropping in value again the dollar
All IMHO

r1tey

68 posts

249 months

Saturday 12th November 2022
quotequote all
Such as (and thanks)

Jiebo

1,084 posts

120 months

Sunday 13th November 2022
quotequote all
Kickstart said:
I prefer investing in an unhedged S&P fund, as my uninformed take on matters is that the UK is likely to have higher rates of inflation that the US over the medium term, which everything being equal, is likely to mean the pound dropping in value again the dollar
All IMHO
The 'fair' value of GBP against the USD is somewhere in the 1.4 region. Whether it returns to this in the years ahead is another matter.