Forward Pricing – Interest Rate Parity and the Forward Curve
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概要
Why does a three-month EUR/USD forward trade at 1.0825 when spot is 1.0850? The answer isn't a forecast. It's mathematics.
Episode 10 takes on the pricing engine behind every forward contract in the FX market. David Axtell walks through Covered Interest Rate Parity — the no-arbitrage relationship linking currency markets with money markets — and explains why forward rates are determined by interest rate differentials, not by anyone's view on where the exchange rate is heading.
He starts with the intuition: two investment strategies — a direct dollar deposit versus converting to euros, investing at euro rates, and selling euros forward — must produce identical returns. If they don't, arbitrage exists and banks eliminate it instantly. That equilibrium condition sets the forward rate.
David then works through a complete EUR/USD calculation step by step: spot rate, dollar and euro interest rates, day-count conventions, and the resulting forward points. He explains why EUR/USD forward points are typically negative (USD rates above EUR rates), what "premium" and "discount" mean in practice, and why traders quote in points rather than outright rates — because points are driven by relatively stable interest differentials while outright rates move with every spot tick.
The episode covers the post-2008 reality where CIP breaks down. Basel III capital requirements, leverage ratio constraints, and structural demand imbalances mean that the cross-currency basis — the deviation from theoretical parity — persists at 20 to 40 basis points and widens dramatically during stress. David explains why this matters for pricing, hedging costs, and funding strategy.
He closes with the forward curve: how the term structure of forward points reflects market expectations about interest rate paths, and how practitioners extract implied interest rates and relative value from the curve.
Next Episode: Hedging in Practice — building a corporate hedging programme with graduated ratios, rolling programmes, and performance measurement.
Based on: Chapter 8 of FX Cash Products by Luigi Rondanini and David Axtell, forthcoming from Rondanini Publishing.