Infrastructure and Interest rate parity: Difference between pages

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Infrastructure is the underlying physical and organisational framework which enables other useful activities.
(IRP).


This theory describes the expected relationship between spot rate and forward foreign exchange rates, and the interest rates in the related currency pair.


Physical infrastructure includes railways, roads, buildings, power, sanitation and telecommunications networks.
Under efficient market conditions the interest rate parity theory predicts that the forward FX rate (available in the market today) should be equal to the spot FX rate, adjusted for the difference in interest rates between the currency pair over the relevant period.


Financial markets infrastructure includes payment systems, securities settlement systems and central counterparties.


Treasury operations infrastructure includes treasury's framework of policies, procedures, reporting lines and other relationships.
IRP holds very strongly for actively traded currency pairs; less so for currencies which are not so actively traded.  




==See also==
== See also ==
*[[Belt and Road]]
* [[Arbitrage]]
*[[CHAPS]]
* [[Covered interest arbitrage]]
*[[CREST]]
* [[Efficient market hypothesis]]
*[[EMIR]]
* [[Foreign exchange]]
*[[Financial Market Infrastructure]]
* [[Forward foreign exchange rate]]
*[[Financial stability]]
* [[Forward forward rate]]
*[[I&E]]
* [[Four way equivalence model]]
*[[Payments and payment systems]]
* [[Interest rate]]
*[[Payment Systems Regulator]]
* [[No arbitrage conditions]]
*[[Project finance]]
* [[Parity]]
*[[Treasury operations]]
* [[Spot rate]]
*[[Trumpononics]]
 
[[Category:Manage_risks]]

Revision as of 13:31, 28 May 2020

(IRP).

This theory describes the expected relationship between spot rate and forward foreign exchange rates, and the interest rates in the related currency pair.

Under efficient market conditions the interest rate parity theory predicts that the forward FX rate (available in the market today) should be equal to the spot FX rate, adjusted for the difference in interest rates between the currency pair over the relevant period.


IRP holds very strongly for actively traded currency pairs; less so for currencies which are not so actively traded.


See also