Hedging your bets against the future: the forex option
All
speculation-based markets are full of uncertainty, and none more so than the
forex market. A currency might be strong and vibrant today, weak and sickly a
month from now. One way to guard against major fluctuations like that is
through forex option trading.
A
forex option is when you buy the right -- but not the obligation -- to buy or
sell a particular currency at a particular rate any time between now and the
expiration date of the option.
Let’s
say you’re worried that the Japanese yen is going to drop in value sometime in
the next six months. You might buy an option that basically locks in the
current exchange rate for whatever period of time the option seller allows,
usually anywhere from 30 days to six months. You set a number of yen, too. Say
you choose 10,000 yen at a rate of 116 yen per U.S. dollar for three months.
The option basically says, “I may want to sell 10,000 yen sometime in the next
three months, but I’m worried the yen is going to devalue in that time. So I’ve
locked in this rate of USD/JPY 116.”
Then
three months pass. If your prediction was correct and the yen has weakened in
that time -- say it’s now USD/JPY 122 -- then you exercise your right to sell
10,000 yen at the rate you bought three months earlier. Everyone else selling
yen today (everyone who didn’t have a forex option, that is) is selling it at
122 per U.S. dollar, and you get to sell it at 116.
If,
on the other hand, the yen has stayed the same or gotten stronger, you are
under no obligation to actually sell that 10,000 yen your option talked about.
You can simply do nothing, and all you’ve lost is the premium you originally
paid for the option.
Ah
yes, there is a premium. Brokers who sell forex options charge a fee for the
privilege. Think of it as insurance; calling it a “premium” certainly fits. The
price of a forex option for 10,000 yen for three months might be $200, which
you must pay up front. If the yen drops enough in value, you’ll hopefully turn
enough of a profit to make up for the $200 you had to pay. If it increases in
value, and you wind up not exercising the option, all you’ve lost is the $200
premium.
Forex option trading used to be done only by major banks and corporations, but now many brokers who cater to individual traders offer the service, too. If you’re a heavy-duty trader, a forex option is definitely something to consider to guard against future setbacks in the currency you hold.
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