Currency Trading Information

Why Hedge Foreign Currency Risk?


International commerce has rapidly increased as the internet has provided a new and more transparent marketplace for individuals and entities alike to conduct international business and trading activities. Significant changes in the international economic and political landscape have led to uncertainty regarding the direction of foreign exchange rates. This uncertainty leads to volatility and the need for an effective vehicle to hedge foreign exchange rate risk and/or interest rate changes while, at the same time, effectively ensuring a future financial position.

Each entity and/or individual that has exposure to foreign exchange rate risk will have specific foreign exchange hedging needs and this website can not possibly cover every existing foreign exchange hedging situation. Therefore, we will cover the more common reasons that a foreign exchange hedge is placed and show you how to properly hedge foreign exchange rate risk.

Foreign Exchange Rate Risk Exposure - Foreign exchange rate risk exposure is common to virtually all who conduct international business and/or trading. Buying and/or selling of goods or services denominated in foreign currencies can immediately expose you to foreign exchange rate risk. If a firm price is quoted ahead of time for a contract using a foreign exchange rate that is deemed appropriate at the time the quote is given, the foreign exchange rate quote may not necessarily be appropriate at the time of the actual agreement or performance of the contract. Placing a foreign exchange hedge can help to manage this foreign exchange rate risk.

Interest Rate Risk Exposure - Interest rate exposure refers to the interest rate differential between the two countries' currencies in a foreign exchange contract. The interest rate differential is also roughly equal to the "carry" cost paid to hedge a forward or futures contract. As a side note, arbitragers are investors that take advantage when interest rate differentials between the foreign exchange spot rate and either the forward or futures contract are either to high or too low. In simplest terms, an arbitrager may sell when the carry cost he or she can collect is at a premium to the actual carry cost of the contract sold. Conversely, an arbitrager may buy when the carry cost he or she may pay is less than the actual carry cost of the contract bought. Either way, the arbitrager is looking to profit from a small price discrepancy due to interest rate differentials.

Foreign Investment / Stock Exposure - Foreign investing is considered by many investors as a way to either diversify an investment portfolio or seek a larger return on investment(s) in an economy believed to be growing at a faster pace than investment(s) in the respective domestic economy. Investing in foreign stocks automatically exposes the investor to foreign exchange rate risk and speculative risk. For example, an investor buys a particular amount of foreign currency (in exchange for domestic currency) in order to purchase shares of a foreign stock. The investor is now automatically exposed to two separate risks. First, the stock price may go either up or down and the investor is exposed to the speculative stock price risk. Second, the investor is exposed to foreign exchange rate risk because the foreign exchange rate may either appreciate or depreciate from the time the investor first purchased the foreign stock and the time the investor decides to exit the position and repatriates the currency (exchanges the foreign currency back to domestic currency). Therefore, even if a speculative profit is achieved because the foreign stock price rose, the investor could actually net lose money if devaluation of the foreign currency occurred while the investor was holding the foreign stock (and the devaluation amount was greater than the speculative profit). Placing a foreign exchange hedge can help to manage this foreign exchange rate risk.

Hedging Speculative Positions - Foreign currency traders utilize foreign exchange hedging to protect open positions against adverse moves in foreign exchange rates, and placing a foreign exchange hedge can help to manage foreign exchange rate risk. Speculative positions can be hedged via a number of foreign exchange hedging vehicles that can be used either alone or in combination to create entirely new foreign exchange hedging strategies.

John Nobile - Senior Account Executive
CFOS/FX - Online Forex Spot and Options Brokerage


MORE RESOURCES:


FinFacts Ireland
Online currency trading platform FXall receives $77.5 million ...
FinFacts Ireland, Ireland - Jul 24, 2006
By Finfacts Team. Online foreign exchange trading platform FXall has received an investment of $77.5 million from private equity ...


British Currency Trading Choppy Against Dollar Ahead Of Fed ...
Trading Markets, CA - Jul 19, 2006
(RTTNews) - The British pound remained low against the US currency during early New York trading Wednesday. However, the pound ticked ...


Dollar Declines Against Euro After Breaking Trading Pattern
Bloomberg - Aug 1, 2006
... raising its borrowing costs this year, boosting the appeal of euro-denominated assets, said Omer Esiner, a currency analyst at currency-trading company Ruesch ...


Buckeye GP declines in IPO; Osiris flat
BusinessWeek - Aug 4, 2006
... Get your free investment guide today. What is Currency Trading? Learn more from GFT Learn to trade currency with free, award-winning software. ...


Controversy and debate surrounding hedge funds
Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, PA - 18 hours ago
... funds. Typically hedge funds have an aggressive investing style, engaging in such things as currency trading and short selling. ...


Personal Finance Live – Part 1
Moneyweb, South Africa - Aug 3, 2006
... Volatility is not necessarily a bad thing. As you know, currency trading on an intraday basis is margined, so it can be geared. ...


Oil prices offsets production decline
BusinessWeek - Aug 3, 2006
... Easy-to-Use Software. Trade on over 60 currency pairs, 24 hours a day. Open a standard or mini account and begin currency trading!


FreedomRocks Currency Trading System Gains Momentum with Consumers
Emediawire (press release), WA - Jul 17, 2006
FreedomRocks, Inc. (www.FreedomRocks.com/11853) is creating a new demographic of traders in the Foreign Exchange Market. The revolutionary ...


Grinding poverty grinds Zimbabwe's former sunshine City, Harare
Zimbabwejournalists.com, UK - Aug 5, 2006
... Zimbabwe, once the southern region’s second largest economy after South Africa, has become a laughing stock with its currency trading in thousands of dollars ...



Jamaica Gleaner
Knowledge, key in forex trading
Jamaica Gleaner, Jamaica - Jul 22, 2006
... when you travel from Jamaica to other countries and you go to a currency booth to exchange Jamaican dollars for US dollars, that's currency trading in a ...

home | site map
© 2006 Indexadvertisements.com

Useful Links

   
Biometrics Solutions Ayurvedic Biometrics Products Job opportunities
Tech News Online Advertisement Software Development Investments Guru
Biometrics Integrated Chipsilicon Matrimonial Semiconductors