Rollovers, Interest Rate Differentials, and Value Dates
Forex traders make money trading currency, either buying low then selling high,
or selling high then buying low. Profits and losses are determined by the relative
purchase and sale prices in opening and closing positions. However, profits and
losses will also be affected by the different interest rates of the currency pair,
by when the trades actually settle, and how long the position is held.
Whenever you have an open position in forex trading, you are exchanging 1 currency
for another. This is true whether you open a long or short position in a specific
currency. If you are long in 1 currency, then you are short in the other. For instance,
if you buy British pounds (GBP) with U.S. dollars (USD), then you are exchanging
USD for GBP, which is the same as selling USD short for GBP. Buying GBP/USD is the
same as selling short USD/GBP.
If you have no open currency position, then you are said to be flat or square.
Sometimes closing a position is termed squaring up.
Value Dates
The day that a currency is traded is known as the trade date, or entry date.
This is the date when your order for a trade was entered and accepted by your broker.
Then the trade is settled sometime later, when the transaction is actually completed.
The date of settlement is known as the value date (aka settlement date,
delivery date).
Because settlement takes time, especially between continents with different time
zones, most currency trades settle in 2 good business days, which is often depicted
as T+2. The exception is North American currency pairs, such as those pairs
consisting of the United States dollar (USD), the Canadian dollar (CAD), or the
Mexican peso (MXN), which settle in 1 good business day (T+1). So, for instance,
USD/CAD would settle in 1 good business day, while USD/EUR would settle in 2 good
business days.
A good business day is a day that is not a holiday or weekend in either currency
country. Because different countries have different holidays, this can sometimes
lead to a value date that is 6 or 7 days from the trade date, particularly at the
beginning and end of the year.
Goodbusinessday®.com is a continuously updated source of information on holidays
and observances affecting global financial markets—bank holidays, public holidays,
currency non-clearing days and trading and settlement holidays affecting exchanges.
Data is organized by country, city, currency and exchange. Interactive calendars
and one-click search facilities provide the information you need in an instant.
Because currency trading is a 24-hour, global market, there needs to be an agreement
as to what constitutes the end of the day. By convention, settlement time
on the value date is at that time that corresponds to 5 P.M. Eastern Standard Time
(EST). After the settlement time, the trade day advances, so the trade day for a
trade after 5 P.M. EST on Monday is considered to be Tuesday. So a trade in EUR/USD
on 3 P.M. Monday Eastern time would settle on Wednesday at 5 P.M. However, if the
same currency pair was traded at 6 P.M. on Monday, then the trade day would be Tuesday
and the value date would be Thursday at 5 P.M. EST. A T+2 currency pair that was
traded after 5 P.M. on Wednesday would settle on Monday, assuming Thursday, Friday,
and Monday are good business days.
Rollovers and Interest Rate Differentials
In the spot market, the settlement of a currency trade, in most cases, requires
the actual delivery and acceptance of the currency. However, most forex traders
do not trade currency with the intention of taking or making delivery of the currency—they
trade for profits from speculation. Hence, most brokers who cater to the speculators
automatically roll over the contracts from 1 value date to the next on each good
business day until the trader closes the transaction—a process called, naturally
enough, a rollover. Rollovers, in effect, continually delays the actual settlement
of the trade until the trader closes her position.
On an open position, interest is earned on the long currency and paid on the short
currency every time the position is rolled over. The interest that is earned or
paid is usually the target interest rate set by the central bank of the country
that issued the currency. When the interest rates of the 2 countries are different,
then there is an interest rate differential which will result in a net earning
or payment of interest. This net interest is often called the rollover rate
and is calculated and either added or deducted from the trader’s account at the
rollover time of each trading day that the position is open. Whether it is added
or deducted depends on whether the rollover rate is positive or negative—hence,
when it is added it is called a positive rollover (aka positive roll)
and a negative rollover (aka negative roll) is subtracted. This interest
is added or deducted every day that the position is rolled over—a one-day rollover.
However, interest is calculated for every day that the position is held, including
weekends and holidays, so the amount of interest credited or debited depends on
the number of days between rollovers. So a weekend rollover, which is any
T+2 trade that takes place after the settlement time on Wednesday (or Thursday for
a T+1 currency pair), will involve 3 times as much interest as a one-day rollover
because there are 3 days instead of just 1 day between rollovers. If the rollover
period is extended because of holidays, then the additional holidays are counted
as well. Hence, any currency pair traded after the settlement time on Wednesday
(for a T+2 pair) or Thursday (for a T+1 pair)
will have a 3-day rollover, and will pay or cost 3 times as much in interest as
a 1-day rollover.
Forex brokers also charge some interest, so the exact amount of interest that you
will earn or pay will depend on the broker. If you have a large amount in your account,
you may be able to negotiate a smaller interest rate spread. Virtually all trading
platforms make the appropriate interest adjustments to your account automatically,
so you do not have to calculate the interest. Some brokers apply the interest by
adjusting your average open positions; others apply it directly to your margin balance.
Most trading platforms show the interest earned or paid as a separate column in
the Closed Positions panel and also as a summary. Most trading platforms will also
show the amount of positive or negative rollover for each currency pair that can
be traded with the platform, thereby informing the trader before the trade of the
interest rate differential.
Since the amount of the interest is determined by the interest rate differential,
the most interest can be earned by going long in the currency that pays the highest
interest and going short in the currency that charges the lowest interest. This
is the basis of the carry trade, where the trader hopes to make most of his
money by earning interest rather than by trading. Currently, the New Zealand dollar
and the Japanese yen have the greatest interest rate differential among the major
currency pairs, with New Zealand paying the highest interest and Japan charging
the lowest interest.
Countries don’t change interest rates often, so a trader earning money from the
interest rate differential does not have to worry about timing the market. However,
the carry trade is not risk-free because adverse movements in the exchange rate
can more than offset any profits in interest. In fact, the carry trade can exacerbate
adverse movements in the exchange rate, because there are many traders attempting
to profit from the interest rate differential, so when the exchange rate moves adversely
to the carry traders, they all attempt to close out their positions at the same
time, which further lowers the value of the high-interest currency against that
of the low-interest currency. For this reason, many carry traders choose other currencies
that also have a high interest rate, such as the Australian dollar (AUD), so that
adverse moves are not magnified as much by carry traders closing out their positions.
In summary:
- A good business day is a day when banks in both currency countries are open—this
excludes Saturday and Sunday, and holidays in either country.
- Settlement time is 5 P.M. Eastern Standard Time on a good business day. For a 24-hour
market, the day begins and ends at settlement time, and the next day begins right
after settlement time. So, for instance, Tuesday in the forex market begins at 5:01
P.M EST Monday.
- The value date or settlement date is 2 good business days after the trade for most
currency pairs and 1 good business day for the major North American currency pairs.
- Because most traders do not want to make or take delivery of the currency, most
forex brokers automatically roll over the current value date to the next value date
at each settlement time.
- Interest accrues every day that the position is open, whether it is a business day
or not.
- Interest is only credited on a positive roll or debited on negative roll when the
contract is rolled over at settlement time (5 P.M. EST). If the contract is not
rolled over, then there is no accrual of interest. So a position that was opened
and closed before settlement time will not have any accrued interest.
- The amount of interest depends on the interest rate differential between the currency
pair minus the interest rate spread that the forex broker charges.
- Use practice accounts of different brokers to compare the actual interest earned
or charged for a particular currency pair.
- Do not do business with a broker that does not clearly show the amount of interest
earned or paid, both for individual positions and as an account total.