enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. 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.

  3. Arbitrage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arbitrage

    "Arbitrage" is a French word and denotes a decision by an arbitrator or arbitration tribunal (in modern French, "arbitre" usually means referee or umpire).It was first defined as a financial term in 1704 by French mathemetician Mathieu de la Porte in his treatise "La science des négociants et teneurs de livres" as a consideration of different exchange rates to recognise the most profitable ...

  4. Covered interest arbitrage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Covered_interest_arbitrage

    If there were no impediments, such as transaction costs, to covered interest arbitrage, then any opportunity, however minuscule, to profit from it would immediately be exploited by many financial market participants, and the resulting pressure on domestic and forward interest rates and the forward exchange rate premium would cause one or more of these to change virtually instantaneously to ...

  5. Arbitrage pricing theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arbitrage_pricing_theory

    In finance, arbitrage pricing theory (APT) is a multi-factor model for asset pricing which relates various macro-economic (systematic) risk variables to the pricing of financial assets. Proposed by economist Stephen Ross in 1976, [ 1 ] it is widely believed to be an improved alternative to its predecessor, the capital asset pricing model (CAPM ...

  6. Uncovered interest arbitrage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uncovered_interest_arbitrage

    A visual representation of a simplified uncovered interest arbitrage scenario, ignoring compounding interest. An arbitrageur executes an uncovered interest arbitrage strategy by exchanging domestic currency for foreign currency at the current spot exchange rate, then investing the foreign currency at the foreign interest rate, and at the end of the investment term using the spot foreign ...

  7. Forward exchange rate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forward_exchange_rate

    The condition allows for no arbitrage opportunities because the return on domestic deposits, 1+i d, is equal to the return on foreign deposits, [F/S](1+i f). If these two returns weren't equalized by the use of a forward contract, there would be a potential arbitrage opportunity in which, for example, an investor could borrow currency in the ...

  8. Interest rate parity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interest_rate_parity

    Explanations include intermediary constraints that can lead to limits to arbitrage, such as balance sheet costs of arbitrage, raised by a team of researchers at the Bank for International Settlements. [9] Other explanations question common assumptions underlying the CIRP condition, such as the choice of discount factors.

  9. Convergence trade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Convergence_trade

    Convergence trade is a trading strategy consisting of two positions: buying one asset forward—i.e., for delivery in future (going long the asset)—and selling a similar asset forward (going short the asset) for a higher price, in the expectation that by the time the assets must be delivered, the prices will have become closer to equal (will have converged), and thus one profits by the ...