Uncovered Interest Arbitrage
Uncovered interest arbitrage is a currency trading strategy where an investor borrows in a currency with a lower interest rate and invests in a currency with a higher interest rate, without using a forward contract to hedge against exchange rate fluctuations. The investor earns the difference in interest rates but is exposed to the risk of unfavorable currency movements that could negate any potential gains.
Example
An investor borrows U.S. dollars at a low interest rate and converts them to Brazilian reais to invest in Brazilian bonds with a higher interest rate, hoping to profit from the interest rate differential while taking on currency risk.
Key points
• A currency arbitrage strategy involving borrowing in a low-interest-rate currency and investing in a higher-interest-rate currency.
• Exposes the investor to exchange rate risk, as no forward contract is used to hedge.
• Profit depends on interest rate differentials and currency movements.