Showing posts with label fx swap. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fx swap. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

The Foreign Exchange Market


There are two main segments that define the foreign exchange market: the over-the-counter market (OTC), and the exchange-traded market. Most activity is in the OTC market, which is made up of commercial and investment banks as well as other financial institutions. The exchange-traded markets are securities exchanges in which foreign-exchange instruments are traded, such as the Chicago Mercantile Exchange or the Philadelphia Stock Exchange.

There are three types of traditional foreign-exchange instruments that are the most common:

Spot Transactions – A currency exchange the second day after an agreement to the transaction.

  • Outright Forward Transactions – A currency exchange three or more days after an agreement to the transaction.
  • FX Swap – A currency exchange in which currency is swapped on one day and then swapped back on a predetermined future date.

In addition to these traditional instruments, there are three other important foreign-exchange instruments:

  • Currency Swaps – Exchanges of interest-bearing financial instruments.
  • Options – The right, but not the obligation to trade foreign currency in the future.
  • Futures Contract – Agreement to buy or sell a particular currency at a particular rate on a particular future date.
For additional information, contact Carl Phelps, Research Associate of GLOBAL ID, LLC. – a Management Consulting and International Market Research Company. http://www.identifyglobal.com/ (720) 334-6982