Interest Rate Parity (IRP)
The no-arbitrage forward exchange rate implied by the interest rate differential between two countries.
What is Interest Rate Parity?
Covered interest rate parity (IRP) states that the forward exchange rate between two currencies must equal the spot rate multiplied by the ratio of their interest rates. If it did not, traders could lock in a risk-free profit by borrowing in the low-rate currency, converting at spot, investing at the high rate, and selling forward — a covered interest arbitrage. IRP is one of the most robust relationships in international finance because currency forwards are directly priced from it. Deviations from IRP signal either market stress (counterparty risk, capital controls) or trading costs.
Formula
Worked Example
1-year forward, Q1 2024
Source: FRED — Federal Funds Rate & ECB Key Interest Rates (2024-03-31)
Calculate Interest Rate Parity
Current exchange rate: domestic currency per 1 unit of foreign currency
1-year interest rate in the domestic (base) currency
1-year interest rate in the foreign (quote) currency
Fair Forward Rate
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How to Interpret Interest Rate Parity
📚 Forex Basics — Complete the path
- FX Cross Rate
- PPP
- Big Mac FX
- Interest Rate Parity
- Carry Trade Return