3.1 Geographical Extent of The Foreign Exchange Market
3.1 Geographical Extent of The Foreign Exchange Market
3.1 Geographical Extent of The Foreign Exchange Market
Dealers in the foreign exchange departments of large international banks often function as market makers. They stand willing to buy and sell those currencies in which they specialize by maintaining an inventory position in those currencies. Participants in Commercial and Investment Transactions: Importers and exporters, international portfolio investors, multinational firms, tourists, and others use the foreign exchange market to facilitate execution of commercial or investment transactions. Some of these participants use the foreign exchange market to hedge foreign exchange risk. Speculators and Arbitragers: Speculators and arbitragers seek to profit from trading in the market. They operate in their own interest, without a need or obligation to serve clients or to ensure a continuous market. Speculators seek all of their profit from exchange rate changes. Arbitragers try to profit from simultaneous exchange rate differences in different markets. Central Banks and Treasuries: Central banks and treasuries use the market to acquire or spend their country's foreign exchange reserves as well as to influence the price at which their own currency is traded. In many instances they do best when they willingly take a loss on their foreign exchange transactions. As willing loss takers, central banks and treasuries differ in motive and behavior form all other market participants. Foreign Exchange Brokers: Foreign exchange brokers are agents who facilitate trading between dealers without themselves becoming principals in the transaction. For this service, they charge a small commission, and maintain access to hundreds of dealers worldwide via open telephone lines. It is a broker's business to know at any moment exactly which dealers want to buy or sell any currency. This knowledge enables the broker to find a counterpart for a client quickly without revealing the identity of either party until after an agreement has been reached.
Because CAD 1.5770 / USD = 1 / {USD 0.6341 / CAD}. These rules also apply to forward rates as well. We will denote an outright forward quote using the following notation: F (CAD / USD ) Direct and Indirect Quotations: A direct quote is a home currency price of a unit of foreign currency.
An indirect quote is a foreign currency price of a unit of home currency. In the US, a direct quote for the CAD is USD 0.6341 / CAD This quote would be an indirect quote in Canada. Bid and Ask Quotations: Interbank quotations are given as "bid" and "ask". A bid is the exchange rate in one currency at which a dealer will buy another currency An ask is the exchange rate at which a dealer will sell the other currency. Dealers buy at the bid price and sell at the ask price, profiting from the spread between the bid and ask prices: bid < ask. Bid and ask quotations are complicated by the fact that the bid for one currency is the ask for another currency: 1 S (CAD / USD ) 1 S a (USD / CAD ) = b S (CAD / USD ) S b (USD / CAD ) =
a
Example 4.1:
A dealer provides you the following quote: USD 0.6333 - 0.6349/ CAD. This suggests that the bid price for the CAD is USD 0.6333/CAD and that the ask price is USD 0.6349/ CAD. The indirect version of this quote would be CAD 1.5750 - 1.5790/USD
Clearly, a dealer willing to purchase CAD at a price of USD 0.6333/USD is implicitly willing to sell USD at the reciprocal price of CAD 1.5790/USD. The spread between bid and ask prices exists for two reasons: 1. Transaction costs and dealers as financial intermediaries and 2. Profits.
The cross rate is THB/BBD is: THB 41.6982 / USD = THB 20.7289 / BBD BBD 2.0116 / USD
In general, the formula for cross rate is: S (i / j ) = S (i / USD ) = S (i / USD ) S (USD / J ) S ( j / USD )
3.8 Summary
The foreign exchange market is the mechanism by which a person of firm transfers purchasing power form one country to another, obtains or provides credit for international trade transactions, and minimizes exposure to foreign exchange risk. A foreign exchange transaction is an agreement between a buyer and a seller that a given amount of one currency is to be delivered at a specified rate for some other currency. A foreign exchange rate is the price of a foreign currency. A foreign exchange quotation or quote is a statement of willingness to buy or sell at an announced rate. The foreign exchange market consists of two tiers: the interbank or wholesale market, and the client or retail market. Participants include banks and nonbank foreign exchange dealers, individuals and firms conducting commercial and investment transactions, speculators and arbitragers, central banks and treasuries, and foreign exchange brokers. Transactions are effectuated either on a spot basis or on a forward or swap basis. A spot transaction is for an (almost) immediate value date while a forward transaction is for a value date somewhere in the future. Quotations can be classified either as European and American terms or as direct and indirect quotes. In the real world, quotations include a bid-ask spread. A bid is the exchange rate in one currency at which a dealer will buy another currency. An ask is the exchange rate at which a dealer will sell the other currency. The spread is the difference between the bid price and the ask price. This spread reflects the existence of commissions and transaction costs. A cross rate is an exchange rate between two currencies, calculated from their common relationship with a third currency.