Even though the mighty US dominates many markets, most of Spot Forex
is still traded through London in Great Britain. So for our next
description we shall use London time. Most deals in Forex are done as
Spot deals. Spot deals are nearly always due for settlement two business
days later. This is referred to as the value date or delivery date. On
that date the counter parties theoretically take delivery of the
currency they have sold or bought.
In Spot FX the majority of the time the end of the business day is
21:59 (London time). Any positions still open at this time are
automatically rolled over to the next business day, which again finishes
at 21:59.
This is necessary to avoid the actual delivery of the currency. As
Spot FX is predominantly speculative most of the time the trades never
wish to actually take delivery of the currency. They will instruct the
brokerage to always rollover their position.
Many of the brokers nowadays do this automatically and it will be in
their polices and procedures. The act of rolling the currency pair over
is known as tom.next, which stands for tomorrow and the next day.
Just to go over this again, your broker will automatically rollover
your position unless you instruct him that you actually want delivery of
the currency. Another point noting is that most leveraged accounts are
unable to actual deliver of the currency as there is insufficient
capital there to cover the transaction.
Remember that if you are trading on margin, you have in effect got a
loan from your broker for the amount you are trading. If you had a 1 lot
position you broker has advanced you the $100,000 even though you did
not actually have $100,000. The broker will normally charge you the
interest differential between the two currencies if you rollover your
position. This normally only happens if you have rolled over the
position and not if you open and close the position within the same
business day.
To calculate the broker's interest he will normally close your
position at the end of the business day and again reopen a new position
almost simultaneously. You open a 1 lot ($100,000) EUR/USD position on
Monday 15th at 11:00 at an exchange rate of 0.9950.
During the day the rate fluctuates and at 22:00 the rate is 0.9975.
The broker closes your position and reopens a new position with a
different value date. The new position was opened at 0.9976 - a 1 pip
difference. The 1 pip deference reflects the difference in interest
rates between the US Dollar and the Euro.
In our example your are long Euro and short US Dollar. As the US
Dollar in the example has a higher interest rate than the Euro you pay
the premium of 1 pip.
Now the good news. If you had the reverse position and you were short
Euros and long US Dollars you would gain the interest differential of 1
pip. If the first named currency has an overnight interest rate lower
than the second currency then you will pay that interest differential if
you bought that currency. If the first named currency has a higher
interest rate than the second currency then you will gain the interest
differential.
To simplify the above. If you are long (bought) a particular currency
and that currency has a higher overnight interest rate you will gain.
If you are short (sold) the currency with a higher overnight interest
rate then you will lose the difference.
I would like to emphasis here that although we are going a little
in-depth to explain how all this works, your broker will calculate all
this for you. The purpose of this book is just to give you an overview
of how the forex market works.
No comments:
Post a Comment