It’s no secret that exchange rates can be and are volatile. If you’re a person who’s earning in Pounds, has a reasonable portion of their wealth in Pounds and intends to retire in the UK spending Pounds then exchange rates are probably not going to lose you too much sleep. Short term volatility might add a couple of hundred pounds to your continental holiday or repress the return on your international equities for a couple of years, where if you've made reasonable plans with a little contingency, is going to be noise in the scheme of things. Long term volatility could end up resulting in some inflation but your Safe Withdrawal Rate has hopefully accounted for that as well.
Now let’s jump to somebody like myself and I'm sure I'm not along out there. I'm earning in Pounds, have a reasonable portion of my wealth in Pounds, intend to retire early somewhere in the Mediterranean (still favouring Malta) but want to always give myself a chance of coming back to the UK if it for any reason turns ugly. From today this is how the plans are unfolding:
1. 12 to 18 months still working for The Man in the UK and earning Pounds
2. Move to Malta (more likely Malta’s smaller island Gozo) and rent for 6 months to be sure I still love the place and know exactly which region I want to live
3. Buy a home for my family
4. Live happily ever after spending Euro’s but with my wealth still set up assuming the UK is home. Longer term I may start to tilt more towards a European home assumption but that would be very gradual and take many years.
So I'm more heavily exposed to the GBP (Pounds or £’s) to EUR (Euro or €) exchange rate. The Euro first started on the 01 January 1999 as an accounting currency and the chart below shows its monthly performance up to present day.
Even over that relatively short period big swings are evident. It was at its weakest in October 2000 at 1.6977 and strongest in January 2009 at 1.0863. The long run average is 1.3756 (the red line on the chart) which isn't far from today’s rate of 1.41287.
Now let’s jump to somebody like myself and I'm sure I'm not along out there. I'm earning in Pounds, have a reasonable portion of my wealth in Pounds, intend to retire early somewhere in the Mediterranean (still favouring Malta) but want to always give myself a chance of coming back to the UK if it for any reason turns ugly. From today this is how the plans are unfolding:
1. 12 to 18 months still working for The Man in the UK and earning Pounds
2. Move to Malta (more likely Malta’s smaller island Gozo) and rent for 6 months to be sure I still love the place and know exactly which region I want to live
3. Buy a home for my family
4. Live happily ever after spending Euro’s but with my wealth still set up assuming the UK is home. Longer term I may start to tilt more towards a European home assumption but that would be very gradual and take many years.
So I'm more heavily exposed to the GBP (Pounds or £’s) to EUR (Euro or €) exchange rate. The Euro first started on the 01 January 1999 as an accounting currency and the chart below shows its monthly performance up to present day.
Click to enlarge, GBP to EUR Exchange Rate January 1999 to June 2015
Even over that relatively short period big swings are evident. It was at its weakest in October 2000 at 1.6977 and strongest in January 2009 at 1.0863. The long run average is 1.3756 (the red line on the chart) which isn't far from today’s rate of 1.41287.