The 4-factor framework: (1) Time horizon — long-term (10+ years) leans unhedged, short-term leans hedged; (2) Base currency — UK investor in GBP with GBP spending needs leans hedged for foreign assets; (3) Asset class — bonds are usually hedged, equities unhedged; (4) Portfolio role — core holdings unhedged (let FX diversify), satellite/tactical holdings can be hedged. The default for a UK retail equity portfolio: unhedged for global equities, hedged for bonds. Reason: equities deliver real returns over decades regardless of FX, while bonds are about preserving GBP capital.
What FX-hedging actually does
A Sterling-hedged ETF uses currency forwards (or similar derivatives) to neutralise the FX impact on your returns. The fund manager:
- Buys forward contracts to sell USD and buy GBP at a future date.
- Locks in the current GBP/USD rate for the foreign asset.
- Your return reflects only the underlying asset performance, not currency movements.
The hedging isn't free. Typical cost: 0.05-0.15% per year for major-currency hedges. This shows up as a small drag on returns vs the unhedged version.
Factor 1 — Time horizon
Currency movements average out over very long horizons. Over 20+ years, the contribution of FX to total returns is usually small. Over 1-5 years, FX can add or subtract 30%+ of total return.
| Time horizon | Default choice | Reasoning |
|---|---|---|
| 20+ years | Unhedged | FX noise averages out; you avoid hedging cost |
| 10-20 years | Unhedged for equities, hedged for bonds | Standard "core" portfolio approach |
| 3-10 years | Mixed — depends on spending purpose | If saving in GBP for known GBP expense (house deposit), favour hedged |
| Under 3 years | Hedged or cash | Currency volatility can blow up the target |
Factor 2 — Base currency vs spending currency
If you're a UK resident with GBP-denominated spending needs (rent, mortgage, food, retirement income), your effective base currency is GBP. Foreign assets exposed to GBP movements have currency risk that may not be desirable.
If you spend in EUR (e.g. retiring to Spain), then having USD-denominated assets exposed to USD/GBP currency adds risk vs your EUR spending. Same applies for any cross-currency spending.
For pure UK-resident-spending-GBP: equity unhedged is acceptable (because long-term returns dominate FX). Bond hedged is preferred (because the goal is preserving GBP capital).
Factor 3 — Asset class
Equities (especially developed market and global)
Equities deliver real returns over decades from underlying business growth. Currency movements are noise on a 20-year horizon. Unhedged is the default for UK retail equity portfolios.
Counter-argument: if a major UK-specific shock causes GBP collapse (Brexit 2016 weakened GBP by ~20%), unhedged global equities go up in GBP terms, partially compensating for any UK-specific portfolio losses. Currency is a natural hedge against UK-specific risk.
Bonds (especially developed market government and high-grade corporate)
Bonds offer a known interest rate denominated in their local currency. The job of bonds in a UK retail portfolio is to preserve GBP capital and reduce volatility. Currency exposure undermines both goals.
Hedged bonds (e.g. VAGS — Vanguard Aggregate Bond UCITS) are the default for UK retail. The hedging cost (~0.05-0.10%) is a small price for the major reduction in volatility.
Emerging market and frontier
EM equities are sometimes hedged, sometimes not. Long-term: unhedged is fine. The default for VEIE / VWO etc. is unhedged. Hedging EM is expensive and the FX volatility is part of the asset class's risk premium.
Commodity ETFs
Most commodity ETFs (oil, gold) are USD-denominated underlyings. UK GBP-hedged versions exist (e.g. CSGOLD vs unhedged SGLD). For long-term gold as an inflation hedge, unhedged is conventional. For tactical short-term commodity exposure, hedged may be preferred.
Factor 4 — Portfolio role
For core portfolio holdings (60-80% of portfolio that you hold for decades): unhedged equities + hedged bonds is the standard.
For tactical satellite positions (5-20% of portfolio held for shorter time horizons or specific themes): hedged is more appropriate. You're trying to get exposure to the underlying asset/theme without confusing the return with FX movement.
For known-purpose savings (deposit fund, planned expense in 3-5 years): hedged is the default — you don't want currency to derail your savings goal.
Worked example — same ETF over 10 years
£10,000 in VWRL (unhedged FTSE All-World) vs VWRP-hedged equivalent over 2014-2024
10-year returns:
| Unhedged VWRL: ~13.5% annualised in GBP | ~£35,200 final value |
| Hedged equivalent (hypothetical): ~10.5% annualised in GBP | ~£27,200 final value |
| FX contribution to VWRL return over decade: ~3%/year from GBP weakness | +~£8,000 advantage |
This was a decade of weakening GBP (2014 GBP was ~1.50 vs USD; 2024 was ~1.25). Unhedged caught the FX tailwind. The reverse could happen in the next decade — there's no guarantee.
The lesson: FX matters substantially on multi-year horizons. Unhedged is bet on either FX neutral or weakening GBP. Hedged removes the FX bet entirely.
The UK-resident standard portfolio
For a typical UK retail investor with 60% equity / 40% bond allocation:
- Equity (60%): unhedged global ETF (VWRL or VWRP — accumulating equivalent). Currency adds noise but not bias over decades.
- Bonds (35%): hedged aggregate bond ETF (VAGS, IGLA, etc.). Goal: preserve GBP capital with reduced volatility.
- Inflation hedge (5%): unhedged gold ETF (SGLD) or short-dated index-linked gilts. Currency exposure is part of the diversification.
This setup captures equity returns (with FX as bonus or tax), holds bonds for stability without FX confusion, and gets a small inflation/crisis hedge.
The hedging cost over time
Hedging costs ~0.05-0.15%/year. Over 30 years on a £100,000 portfolio at 7% return:
| £100k at 7% for 30 years (no hedging cost) | £761,225 |
| £100k at 6.90% for 30 years (0.10% hedging drag) | £740,375 |
| Cost of 30 years of hedging | ~£20,850 |
For a long-term portfolio, the hedging cost is meaningful but not catastrophic. The question is whether the volatility reduction it buys is worth that cost — for bonds, yes; for equities, debatable.
Sources and methodology
FX-hedging mechanics follow standard derivatives theory. Historical FX volatility data is from Bank of England published statistics. The decision framework reflects mainstream UK retail investment guidance. For personalised investment advice, see the tax adviser editorial recommendation (regulated investment advice requires FCA authorisation). The methodology page documents sources.
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