Currency swaps are essential derivative instruments for companies and investors operating in international markets. They allow the conversion of payment flows from one currency to another while benefiting from preferential interest rates.
When a company borrows in a foreign currency, it is often exposed to exchange rate fluctuations and potentially higher interest rates compared to borrowing in its local currency.
A currency swap can help optimize costs by leveraging comparative advantages in different interest rate environments.
Take two companies, A (AAA-rated) and B (BBB-rated), both needing to borrow €10M for five years.
The fixed-rate spread is 1.2% (5.2% - 4.0%), while the floating-rate spread is only 0.7% (EURIBOR + 100 - EURIBOR + 30).
This means B has a relative advantage in floating-rate borrowing, while A benefits more in the fixed-rate market, creating an opportunity for a swap to lower costs for both.
A direct loan in USD would cost the company 6% annual interest. However, it can borrow in EUR at a rate of 3%.
Using a EUR/USD currency swap, it can convert its EUR-denominated loan into a USD liability, benefiting from the lower EUR interest rate and securing a fixed exchange rate for future USD payments.
A currency swap is a contract in which two parties exchange interest payments and/or principal amounts in different currencies.
Suppose a European company needs $100 million for a project. Instead of borrowing directly in USD, it opts for a currency swap.
This strategy enables the company to benefit from a lower EUR interest rate while securing its USD payment obligations at a known exchange rate.
The diagram above shows the flow of funds in a typical currency swap.
Apprenez à identifier, mesurer et gérer le risque de change grâce aux dérivés. Comprenez les stratégies de couverture et les outils pour maîtriser la volatilité des devises.
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