Forex Arbitrage

Forex Arbitrage

Forex arbitrage is the strategy of exploiting price disparity in the forex markets. An uncovered interest rate arbitrage involves changing a domestic currency which carries a lower interest rate to a foreign currency that offers a higher rate of interest on deposits. Other forex arbitrage includes: Currency arbitrage involves the exploitation of the differences in quotes rather than movements in the exchange rates of the currencies in the currency pair. It may be effected in various ways but however it is carried out, the arbitrage seeks to buy currency prices and sell currency prices that are currently divergent but extremely likely to rapidly converge. Because the Forex markets are decentralized, even in this era of automated algorithmic trading, there can exist moments where a currency traded in one place is somehow being quoted differently from the same currency in another trading location.

Forex arbitrage is a trading strategy that seeks to exploit price discrepancy.

What is Forex Arbitrage?

Forex arbitrage is the strategy of exploiting price disparity in the forex markets. It may be effected in various ways but however it is carried out, the arbitrage seeks to buy currency prices and sell currency prices that are currently divergent but extremely likely to rapidly converge. The expectation is that as prices move back towards a mean, the arbitrage becomes more profitable and can be closed, sometimes even in milliseconds.

Forex arbitrage is a trading strategy that seeks to exploit price discrepancy.
Market participants engaged in arbitrage, collectively, help the market become more efficient.
All types of arbitrage rely on unusual circumstances being temporarily extant in the markets.

How Forex Arbitrage Works

Because the Forex markets are decentralized, even in this era of automated algorithmic trading, there can exist moments where a currency traded in one place is somehow being quoted differently from the same currency in another trading location. An arbitrageur able to spot the discrepancy can buy the lower of the two prices and sell the higher of the two prices and likely lock in a profit on the divergence.

For example, suppose that the EURJPY forex pair was quoted at 122.500 by a bank in London, but was quoted at 122.540 by a bank in Tokyo. A trader with access to both quotes would be able to buy the London price and sell the Tokyo price. When the prices had later converged at say, 122.550, the trader would close both trades. The Tokyo position would lose 1 pip, while the London position would gain 5, so the the trader would have gained 4 pips less transaction costs.

Such an example may appear to imply that a profit so small would hardly be worth the effort, but many arbitrage opportunities in the forex market are exactly this minute or even more so. Because such discrepancies could be discoverable across many markets many times a day, it was worthwhile for specialized firms spending the time and money to build the necessary systems to capture these inefficiencies. This is a big part of the reason the forex markets are so heavily computerized and automated nowadays.

Automated algorithmic trading has shortened the timeframe for forex arbitrage trades. Price discrepancies that could last several seconds or even minutes now may remain for only a sub-second timeframe before reaching equilibrium. In this way arbitrage strategies have make the forex markets more efficient than ever. However, volatile markets and price quote errors or staleness can and do still provide arbitrage opportunities.

Other forex arbitrage includes:

Forex Arbitrage Challenges

Some circumstances can hinder or prevent arbitrage. A discount or premium may result from currency market liquidity differences, which is not a price anomaly or arbitrage opportunity, making it more challenging to execute trades to close a position. Arbitrage demands rapid execution, so a slow trading platform or trade entry delays can limit opportunity. Time sensitivity and complex trading calculations require real-time management solutions to control operations and performance. This need has resulted in the use of automated trading software to scan the markets for price differences to execute forex arbitrage.

Forex arbitrage often requires lending or borrowing at near to risk-free rates, which generally are available only at large financial institutions. The cost of funds may limit traders at smaller banks or brokerages. Spreads, as well as trading and margin cost overhead, are additional risk factors.

Related terms:

Convergence

Convergence is the movement of the price of a futures contract toward the spot price of the underlying cash commodity as the delivery date approaches. read more

Covered Interest Arbitrage

Covered interest arbitrage is a strategy where an investor uses a forward contract to hedge against exchange rate risk. Returns are typically small but it can prove effective. read more

Cross Currency & Example

A cross currency is a currency rate that is quoted and transacted without using U.S. dollars.  read more

Currency Arbitrage

Currency arbitrage is the act of buying and selling currencies instantaneously for a riskless profit. read more

Forex Options Trading

Forex options trading allows currency traders to realize gains or hedge positions of trading without having to purchase the underlying currency pair. read more

Forex Spot Rate

The forex spot rate is the most commonly quoted forex rate in both the wholesale and retail market. read more

Forex Trading Strategy

A forex trading strategy is a set of analyses that a forex day trader uses to determine whether to buy or sell a currency pair. read more

Forex (FX) , Uses, & Examples

Forex (FX) is the market for trading international currencies. The name is a portmanteau of the words foreign and exchange. read more

Interest Rate Parity (IRP)

Interest rate parity (IRP) is the fundamental equation that governs the relationship between interest rates and foreign exchange rates. read more

Uncovered Interest Arbitrage

Uncovered interest arbitrage involves switching from a lower interest rate currency to a higher interest rate currency in order to increase returns. read more