| Spot Rates | Forward Rates |
| How Forward FX Rates are Calculated & Examples |
Fixed Date Forward FX Contracts
The Delivery Date of
a Forward Contract ranges from three days to more than five years from the FX
Contract date, depending on requirements and depth of market.
In practice, the
delivery dates of the vast volume of forward contracts are for between seven
days and one year ahead.
Forward contracts
are a very suitable method of providing a perfect hedge for transaction
exposures, since they can be written for most currencies in most amounts for
delivery at most future dates, and taken out exactly to match the position of
the original exposure.
Foreign exchange for
immediate delivery (within 2-days) is purchase and sold on the Spot Market.
Forward Markets fix
future exchange rates today and are used by:
- companies wishing to protect themselves against the risk of adverse
exchange rate movement
- arbitrageurs wishing to profit from differences in the interest rates between countries, and
- speculators who use the forward market to buy foreign exchange in the
expectation of favourable FX rate movements
Forward Rates
The Forward FX rate
is usually different from the Spot FX rate for the same currency, but not
always.
The difference
between the Forward and Spot FX rates is called either the 'Premium' or
'Discount' of the Forward rate over the Spot rate. When they are the same rate
they are at 'Par'.
Forward rates are
always quoted against the Spot Rate, i.e. by an amount that has to be added to
or deducted from the Spot Rate. This amount (margin) represents the obtainable
interest rate differential between the two (freely convertible) currencies for
borrowing and depositing currency for the forward period required.
The Forward rate is
not a prediction of future exchange rates. It is calculated using interest rate
differentials between the two currencies involved, expressed as a forward
premium (deducted from the current Spot FX Rate) or a forward discount (added
to the current Spot FX Rate) as follows:
Spot x interest rate differential x period in days
360 x 100
Note that the year
is calculated as 360 days not 365 days.
There are only three
possible rates ways of expressing Forward FX rates against the Spot Rate:-
- At "PAR" when the margin is nil. Here there is nothing to add to or subtract from the Spot Rate. If the bank advises an exporting customer that it buys Euros Spot at EUR1.6435/£1 three months forward at "par", and then the three months' rate is also EUR1.6435/£1.
- At a "PREMIUM", which must be deducted from the Spot Rate to establish the forward rate.
- At a "DISCOUNT", which must be added to the Spot Rate to establish the forward rate.

If you are importing or exporting, for expert commercial foreign exchange services, speak to us at Raphael's Bank.

Quick and easy foreign exchange deals via our branch network, treasury centres or over the Internet.
More information.






Printer Friendly