Részletes útmutató hamarosan
Dolgozunk egy átfogó oktatási útmutatón a(z) Covered Interest Parity számára. Nézzen vissza hamarosan a lépésről lépésre történő magyarázatokért, képletekért, valós példákért és szakértői tippekért.
Covered Interest Parity (CIP) is a no-arbitrage condition in international finance that links the spot exchange rate, forward exchange rate, and interest rate differentials between two countries. The core principle states that the return on a domestic investment should exactly equal the return on a foreign investment of the same maturity when the foreign currency exposure is fully hedged using a forward contract. If this equality breaks down, risk-free arbitrage profits become possible: investors could simultaneously borrow in the low-rate currency, invest in the high-rate currency, and lock in the exchange rate via a forward contract to generate a guaranteed profit. In liquid, well-functioning markets, competition eliminates such opportunities almost instantly, making CIP one of the tightest relationships in financial economics. The CIP condition is expressed as: F/S = (1 + r_d) / (1 + r_f), where F is the forward exchange rate, S is the spot rate, r_d is the domestic interest rate, and r_f is the foreign interest rate. When this ratio equals the interest rate ratio, the market is in CIP equilibrium. In practice, small deviations — known as the CIP basis — persist due to transaction costs, credit risk in the forward market, regulatory capital constraints on dealer banks, and counterparty risk in cross-currency basis swaps. The 2008 financial crisis and post-crisis bank regulations dramatically widened CIP deviations, challenging the traditional view that CIP is a near-perfect arbitrage relationship. Researchers at the BIS documented substantial, persistent CIP deviations, particularly in the USD-EUR, USD-JPY, and USD-CHF pairs, which have driven significant academic and policy interest in understanding market segmentation and dealer balance sheet constraints.
S = (1 + r_d) / (1 + r_f), where F is the forward exchange rate,. This formula calculates covered interest parity by relating the input variables through their mathematical relationship. Each component represents a measurable quantity that can be independently verified.
- 1Obtain the current spot exchange rate S (e.g., USD/EUR) and the n-period forward rate F for the same currency pair.
- 2Collect the n-period risk-free interest rates for both countries (e.g., 3-month T-bill rate for domestic and foreign).
- 3Calculate the CIP-implied forward rate: F_CIP = S × (1 + r_d) / (1 + r_f).
- 4Compare F_CIP with the actual market forward rate F to compute the CIP basis: Basis = F − F_CIP (in forward points or basis points annualized).
- 5If Basis > 0, the foreign currency is expensive to hedge forward (domestic investors face a hedging cost).
- 6If Basis < 0, a covered arbitrage may exist: borrow domestically, invest abroad, sell the foreign currency forward.
- 7Assess whether the basis exceeds transaction costs and capital requirements before concluding a genuine arbitrage opportunity exists.
Near-perfect parity under normal market conditions
Using the CIP formula: 1.08 × (1 + 0.0530/4) / (1 + 0.0390/4) = 1.08 × 1.01325/1.00975 ≈ 1.0838. The actual forward matches the implied forward almost exactly, confirming CIP holds in this example and there is no covered arbitrage opportunity.
Large negative basis reflects post-Basel III dealer balance sheet constraints
The CIP-implied forward is approximately 151.94 JPY/USD, but the market forward is only 149.05 — a gap of nearly 190 basis points annualized. This negative basis means hedging dollar exposure into yen is expensive for USD investors, reflecting reduced dealer capacity to intermediate cross-currency swaps after post-crisis capital regulations increased the cost of holding offsetting positions.
Pre-transaction cost calculation only
The CIP-implied 6-month forward is 1.2592 GBP/USD but the market quotes only 1.2408, a significant gap. In theory, borrowing USD at 5.5%, converting to GBP spot at 1.25, investing in UK gilts at 4%, and locking in the return via the forward at 1.2408 generates approximately 1.84% annualized above the borrowing cost. In practice, bid-ask spreads and balance sheet costs would reduce or eliminate this.
Reflects higher USD interest rates pulling forward rate below spot
With USD rates exceeding AUD rates by 0.95 percentage points, covered interest parity requires the AUD to trade at a forward discount to prevent arbitrage. The 12-month forward of 0.6438 compensates dollar investors for earning a lower hedged yield on AUD investments relative to what they could earn directly in USD money markets.
Corporate hedging of known foreign currency payables and receivables. This application is commonly used by professionals who need precise quantitative analysis to support decision-making, budgeting, and strategic planning in their respective fields
Bank treasury management of cross-currency funding — Industry practitioners rely on this calculation to benchmark performance, compare alternatives, and ensure compliance with established standards and regulatory requirements, helping analysts produce accurate results that support strategic planning, resource allocation, and performance benchmarking across organizations
Detection of pricing anomalies in FX swap and forward markets. Academic researchers and students use this computation to validate theoretical models, complete coursework assignments, and develop deeper understanding of the underlying mathematical principles
Central bank assessment of dollar funding stress — Financial analysts and planners incorporate this calculation into their workflow to produce accurate forecasts, evaluate risk scenarios, and present data-driven recommendations to stakeholders
Carry trade risk management and hedged carry strategies. This application is commonly used by professionals who need precise quantitative analysis to support decision-making, budgeting, and strategic planning in their respective fields
CIP deviations spike dramatically at quarter-end and year-end as banks shrink
CIP deviations spike dramatically at quarter-end and year-end as banks shrink their balance sheets for regulatory reporting purposes, temporarily withdrawing from FX swap intermediation and causing forward rates to deviate sharply from CIP-implied levels. When encountering this scenario in covered interest parity calculations, users should verify that their input values fall within the expected range for the formula to produce meaningful results. Out-of-range inputs can lead to mathematically valid but practically meaningless outputs that do not reflect real-world conditions.
For EM currencies with capital controls or thin forward markets, CIP deviations
For EM currencies with capital controls or thin forward markets, CIP deviations reflect genuine transfer risk, capital flow restrictions, and thin market liquidity rather than arbitrageable mispricings — investors correctly demand a premium for the additional risks. This edge case frequently arises in professional applications of covered interest parity where boundary conditions or extreme values are involved. Practitioners should document when this situation occurs and consider whether alternative calculation methods or adjustment factors are more appropriate for their specific use case.
During the COVID-19 March 2020 crisis, USD funding stress caused the EUR/USD
During the COVID-19 March 2020 crisis, USD funding stress caused the EUR/USD 3-month basis to blow out to nearly -100 bps as dollar demand overwhelmed the market. The Fed's swap line expansions with major central banks effectively restored CIP by flooding markets with dollar liquidity. In the context of covered interest parity, this special case requires careful interpretation because standard assumptions may not hold. Users should cross-reference results with domain expertise and consider consulting additional references or tools to validate the output under these atypical conditions.
| Currency Pair | Approx. Basis (bps) | Direction | Primary Driver |
|---|---|---|---|
| USD/JPY | -30 to -60 | Negative (JPY side) | Japanese demand for USD hedged assets |
| USD/EUR | -10 to -25 | Negative (EUR side) | European bank USD funding needs |
| USD/GBP | -5 to -15 | Slightly negative | Post-Brexit bank fragmentation |
| USD/CHF | -20 to -40 | Negative (CHF side) | Safe-haven demand, SNB policy |
| USD/AUD | +5 to +15 | Positive (AUD side) | Commodity currency premium |
What is the difference between CIP and UIP?
Covered Interest Parity (CIP) uses a forward contract to eliminate currency risk — the exchange rate on the future transaction is locked in today, making the parity condition risk-free. Uncovered Interest Rate Parity (UIP) relies instead on the expected future spot rate, which is uncertain, so UIP involves currency risk and depends on investor expectations and risk appetite. CIP holds tightly in liquid markets; UIP frequently fails empirically, especially at short horizons.
Why did CIP break down after the 2008 financial crisis?
Post-crisis banking regulations, particularly Basel III requirements for higher capital ratios and the leverage ratio, significantly increased the cost for dealer banks to hold the offsetting positions needed to intermediate cross-currency basis swaps. Banks became less willing to absorb CIP deviations even when arbitrage opportunities appeared. This regulatory balance sheet constraint is now widely recognized as a structural feature of modern FX markets, not a temporary market friction.
What is the cross-currency basis?
The cross-currency basis is the spread above or below LIBOR/SOFR that one party pays or receives in a cross-currency swap to convert a floating-rate obligation in one currency into another. A negative basis for a currency (e.g., EUR, JPY) means market participants pay a premium to obtain USD funding via swaps, reflecting excess demand for dollar liquidity. The cross-currency basis is essentially the empirical measure of CIP deviations in swap markets.
How are forward rates quoted in practice?
Forward exchange rates are typically quoted as spot rate plus or minus forward points (also called swap points). The forward points represent the interest rate differential between the two currencies and are added to or subtracted from the spot rate. Positive forward points mean the base currency trades at a forward premium; negative points mean a forward discount. Dealers quote bid and ask forward points separately, and the spread widens for longer tenors and less liquid currency pairs.
Can retail investors exploit CIP deviations?
In practice, retail investors cannot exploit CIP deviations because the arbitrage requires simultaneous access to interbank lending markets, institutional-quality forward contracts, and extremely low transaction costs. CIP deviations net of realistic bid-ask spreads and funding costs are typically unprofitable for non-bank participants. The deviations are most accessible to large commercial banks and institutional players with privileged market access and balance sheet capacity.
What currencies show the largest CIP deviations?
Historically the USD-JPY, USD-EUR, and USD-CHF currency pairs have shown the most persistent CIP deviations, particularly post-2008. BIS research documents that the demand for USD funding globally is so strong that investors accept below-CIP-implied returns to obtain dollar liquidity. Emerging market currency pairs also exhibit large CIP deviations, but these partly reflect genuine credit and liquidity risk rather than pure market friction.
How does CIP relate to corporate hedging strategies?
Corporations use forward contracts extensively to hedge known future foreign currency cash flows, and the pricing of those forwards is governed by CIP. When the CIP basis widens (forward becoming expensive relative to interest differentials), hedging costs rise for multinationals. For example, a Japanese company that invoices in USD and wants to lock in its yen revenues will face higher hedging costs when the USD-JPY basis is deeply negative, directly affecting the economics of export contracts and repatriation decisions.
Pro Tip
When computing CIP for tenors under 1 year, use simple interest (money market convention): F = S × (1 + r_d × T) / (1 + r_f × T), where T is the fraction of the year. Use compound interest for tenors over 1 year.
Did you know?
The Federal Reserve's emergency swap lines with 14 central banks during the March 2020 COVID crisis injected over $450 billion in dollar liquidity within weeks, almost single-handedly closing a -120 bps CIP deviation in the EUR/USD swap market.