How Interest Rates Affect Forex Trading

They Affect Everything, Especially FX

'Paper with interest rates, close-up'
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Forex rates are always on the move. When traders are new, sometimes the moves seem mysterious and random. Many things affect the movement of exchange rates between countries. One thing that is always an underlying factor that is constant is the interest rate of a currency. In general, it's considered good practice anywhere to gain interest on your money. Investors everywhere tend to prefer money market funds, bonds, and all types of investment instruments that offer paid interest in return for the use of the money.

An enormous advantage of having access to a forex trading account is that you can invest your money in foreign currencies that pay interest. The interest rate differential works out when you find a country that has a low-interest rate to sell. A setup like this is called carry trading. Carry trading is when you pick a currency pair that has a currency with a high-interest rate and a currency with a low-interest rate, and you hold it for the currency that pays more interest. Using daily rollover, you get paid daily on the difference in interest between the two countries. If you've employed some leverage, you can make a very good return versus the capital required to make the trade.

Key Takeaways

  • Forex rates are always on the move. One thing that is always a constant underlying factor is the interest rate on a currency.
  • An enormous advantage of having access to a forex trading account is that you can invest your money in foreign currencies that pay interest.
  • There are always multiple factors that move a currency, but interest is one of the number one factors, only followed by risk.
  • If you can understand those two factors when making trades, you'll be fine as long as you don't overdo it.

How Do Interest Rates Affect Currencies?

The easy answer is that it makes global investors pour their money into countries so they can get a piece of the return. As interest rates go up, interest in that country's currency goes up. If a country raises interest rates over an extended period of time, this can cause a broad trend against other currencies. Money just continues to pile into these currencies until there is any indication that the party might end soon.

The downside of this approach to trading is that it's very risk-sensitive. Anything that could affect economies globally can shake an interest rate trade to the core. This type of shakeup doesn't come often, but when it does, it leaves disaster in its wake for anyone that isn't prepared. For example, a volume of over 100 pips a day is already considered a lot; but during Brexit, the high-interest GBP/USD maximum daily movement topped out at 1,791 pips as the world economic landscape became very uncertain. Often, after major changes like this occur, forex trading can become quite volatile in the months that follow.

Sometimes a country will have a high-interest rate but a falling currency. Such a disparity is usually an indication that the amount of interest they are paying isn't worth the risk required. The other thing it can indicate is that there are signs that rates will be lowered soon.

But I Thought Interest Rates Did Not Move Very Often? 

While it is true that rates do not move much, expectations on the direction and slope of rate changes seem to change on a week-to-week basis. One of the most popular markets for watching changing interest rate expectations are 2-Year Government Debt like the US 2-Yr Treasury. 

As a forex trader, it's good to look at the whole picture. How is the country doing economically? Why are they raising or lowering interest rates? Not to mention, you need to know about the country that you're pairing the high-interest currency against. It is all a game of relation. Sometimes it's one of the currencies in the pair that is causing movement, and sometimes it's both, so it's always good to take the whole picture into account.

There are always multiple factors that move a currency, but interest is one of the number one factors, only followed by risk. If you can understand those two factors when making trades, you'll be fine as long as you don't overdo it.

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Sources
The Balance uses only high-quality sources, including peer-reviewed studies, to support the facts within our articles. Read our editorial process to learn more about how we fact-check and keep our content accurate, reliable, and trustworthy.
  1. DailyFX. "Understanding Forex Rollover."

  2. Ahmed S. Alanazi and Ammar S. Alanazi. "The Profitability of Technical Analysis: Evidence from the Piercing Line and Dark Cloud Cover Patterns in the Forex Market." Cogent Economics & Finance.

  3. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. "Selected Interest Rates (Daily) - H.15."

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