Interest Rates and Currency-Price Volatility

The interest rates associated with individual currencies are one of the most obvious yet least-understood forces in the foreign exchange marketplace. Their most negative effects capture public attention during carry-trade bubbles, such as the recent (summer 2007) rise — and then abrupt fall — of the New Zealand dollar versus the Japanese yen. But day-to-day, currency traders are misled by a broken market mechanism that encourages pricing to skew away from any connection with reality. In the following interview, Richard Olsen, co-foun der of OANDA, discusses this little-understood issue. The solution he recommends – and has put into practice at Olsen Ltd. and OANDA, the prominent online forex brokerage he founded in 1995 — is continuous interest-rate payment, second-by-second, on all open positions. Continuous interest makes the yield component of every currency transaction real. In a marketplace where fundamentals are few and far between, an d where pricing tends to lack any fundamental frame of reference, continuous interest will help stabilize markets and enable incremental intervention to avoid valuation free-falls…

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October 24th, 2008 | Economics, News | RSS feed

One Response to “Interest Rates and Currency-Price Volatility”

  1. Hi, this is Daniel North. This post is really very appreciable. your post is very advantageous for me and very good. Thanks a lot.interest rates associated with individual currencies are one of the most obvious yet least-understood forces in the foreign exchange marketplace. Their most negative effects capture public attention during carry-trade bubbles,Continuous interest makes the yield component of every currency transaction real. In a marketplace where fundamentals are few and far between, an d where pricing tends to lack any fundamental frame of reference.
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    Daniel North

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