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  2. Currency swap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Currency_swap

    A cross-currency swap's (XCS's) effective description is a derivative contract, agreed between two counterparties, which specifies the nature of an exchange of payments benchmarked against two interest rate indexes denominated in two different currencies.

  3. Foreign exchange swap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foreign_exchange_swap

    In finance, a foreign exchange swap, forex swap, or FX swap is a simultaneous purchase and sale of identical amounts of one currency for another with two different value dates (normally spot to forward) [1] and may use foreign exchange derivatives. An FX swap allows sums of a certain currency to be used to fund charges designated in another ...

  4. Swap (finance) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swap_(finance)

    A currency swap involves exchanging principal and fixed rate interest payments on a loan in one currency for principal and fixed rate interest payments on an equal loan in another currency. Just like interest rate swaps, the currency swaps are also motivated by comparative advantage. Currency swaps entail swapping both principal and interest ...

  5. Foreign exchange spot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foreign_exchange_spot

    A foreign exchange spot transaction, also known as FX spot, is an agreement between two parties to buy one currency against selling another currency at an agreed price for settlement on the spot date. The exchange rate at which the transaction is done is called the spot exchange rate.

  6. Triangular arbitrage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triangular_arbitrage

    Triangular arbitrage opportunities may only exist when a bank's quoted exchange rate is not equal to the market's implicit cross exchange rate. The following equation represents the calculation of an implicit cross exchange rate, the exchange rate one would expect in the market as implied from the ratio of two currencies other than the base currency.

  7. Central bank liquidity swap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_bank_liquidity_swap

    Central bank liquidity swap is a type of currency swap used by a country's central bank to provide liquidity of its currency to another country's central bank. [1] [2] In a liquidity swap, the lending central bank uses its currency to buy the currency of another borrowing central bank at the market exchange rate, and agrees to sell the borrower's currency back at a rate that reflects the ...

  8. Foreign exchange market - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foreign_exchange_market

    Measured by value, foreign exchange swaps were traded more than any other instrument in April 2022, at US$3.8 trillion per day, followed by spot trading at US$2.1 trillion. [3] The $7.5 trillion break-down is as follows: $2.1 trillion in spot transactions; $1.2 trillion in outright forwards; $3.8 trillion in foreign exchange swaps; $124 billion ...

  9. Quanto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quanto

    Quanto swaps, in which one counterparty pays a non-local interest rate to the other, but the notional amount is in local currency. The second party may be paying a fixed or floating rate. For example, a swap in which the notional amount is denominated in Canadian dollars, but where the floating rate is set as USD LIBOR, would be considered a ...