Foreign exchange swap and Fund: Difference between pages

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(FX swap).
A composite over the counter foreign exchange transaction.
===Definition of FX swaps===
A foreign exchange swap is a composite over the counter (OTC) foreign exchange transaction which involves:
(A) An initial exchange of two different currencies
#on a specified 'near leg' date
#at a fixed foreign exchange rate which is pre-agreed at the outset of the contract; and
(B) A reverse-direction exchange of the same two currencies
#on a later pre-specified 'far leg' date
#at a fixed exchange rate which is usually different, and which is also pre-agreed at the outset of the contract.
===Uses===
1.
1.


The uses of FX swaps include the temporary transformation of short term borrowings or deposits from one currency into another.
A privately owned investment portfolio, established to safeguard and grow the wealth of the investors.


For example, if a customer has a temporary surplus of GBP and a shortfall of EUR for a week, it could enter into the following FX swap contract:
For example, a mutual fund or a money market fund.


* Exchange the temporary surplus of GBP into EUR for value spot (the 'near leg')
* Re-exchange the EUR back into GBP, for value a  week later (the 'far leg')


2.


2.
An organisation established to promote development or other public benefit.


A closely related use of FX swaps is to concentrate temporary cash surpluses, to improve short-term investment income.
For example, the International Monetary Fund.




3.
3.


FX swaps are also used to modify the value date of an existing forward foreign exchange contract.
An organisation established to safeguard the interests of stakeholders in other defaulting organisations.
 
The combination of the FX swap and the existing forward contract, re-establishes the forward contract, with a later value date.
 
 
===Amounts of currency===
 
The amounts of currency in the far leg re-exchange are generally greater than those in the near leg, by the amount of interest payable or receivable in the currency which the customer is swapping into.
 
 
For example, when hedging a deposit with a swap, the far leg amount will usually be greater than the amount in the near leg, by the amount of interest receivable on the swapped deposit.
 
Similarly, when hedging a borrowing using a swap, the far leg amount will normally be greater, by the interest payable on the swapped borrowing.
 
 
As the FX swap is an OTC contract, the provider and the customer are free to tailor the amounts of currency to be exchanged in this way, to meet the customer's individual hedging requirements.
 
 
Another way of achieving this result is to use the same principal amount of currency in the near leg and the far leg, and to deal with interest in a separate outright forward transaction.
 
When the far leg rate of the swap is set equal to the outright forward foreign exchange rate - as is often the case in practice - the result achieved is economically identical to rolling up the entire composite deal within the swap.
 
 
===Pricing===
 
The composite pricing of the FX swap is favourable for the price-taker (customer), compared with the pricing of two related outright contracts, for example for spot exchange and forward re-exchange of the same currency pair.
 
The reason that the market maker can give a better price for the price-taker, is that the market maker is not taking any foreign exchange risk on the composite transaction.
 
The market-maker can hedge its position by a borrowing and a deposit in the two currencies being swapped.
 
The prices and cost for the customer therefore only reflect the bid-offer spreads on the hedging interest rate contracts.
 
The market maker does not need to strike any hedging foreign exchange contracts. This saving - of the spread on the hedging FX contract - can be reflected in favourable pricing for the customer.
 
 
===FX swap viewed as simultaneous borrowing and deposit===
 
An FX swap agreement can also be viewed as a simultaneous borrowing of one currency, and a lending of the other currency, with the same counterparty.
 
This is relatively low risk for the market maker, because it can be viewed as a secured/collateralised loan by the market maker, the collateral being the simultaneous deposit received from the customer.
 
For this reason the agreement can be priced relatively favourably for the customer, compared with a spot FX deal and a foreign exchange forward contract.
 
 
===Interest rate swaps and cross-currency interest rate swaps===


FX swaps should not be confused with [[interest rate swap]]s, nor [[cross-currency interest rate swap]]s, which are both different.
For example, the UK's Pension Protection Fund.




== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Cash concentration]]
*[[European Fund and Asset Management Association]]
* [[Cross-currency interest rate swap]]
*[[Fund manager]]
* [[Currency swap]]
*[[Institutional investor]]
* [[Foreign exchange]]
*[[International Monetary Fund]]
* [[Foreign exchange forward contract]]
*[[Money market fund]]
* [[Interest rate swap]]
*[[Mutual fund]]
* [[Over the counter]]
*[[Pension fund]]
* [[Spot]]
*[[Pension Protection Fund]]
* [[Swap]]
*[[Portfolio]]
* [[Swap points]]
* [[Spread]]
* [[CertICM]]


[[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]]
[[Category:The_business_context]]
[[Category:Identify_and_assess_risks]]
[[Category:Manage_risks]]
[[Category:Manage_risks]]
[[Category:Risk_frameworks]]
[[Category:Cash_management]]
[[Category:Financial_products_and_markets]]

Revision as of 16:39, 24 December 2019

1.

A privately owned investment portfolio, established to safeguard and grow the wealth of the investors.

For example, a mutual fund or a money market fund.


2.

An organisation established to promote development or other public benefit.

For example, the International Monetary Fund.


3.

An organisation established to safeguard the interests of stakeholders in other defaulting organisations.

For example, the UK's Pension Protection Fund.


See also