A currency swap is similar, in concept, to an interest rate swap, but they differ quite remarkably in specific aspects. First, the exchanged cash flows in the former are in different currencies (that means, pricing a currency swap would require two different yield curves instead of one). Second, a currency swap involves the exchange of notional principal amounts at the trade date and the re-exchange at maturity, whilst in an interest rate swap the notional amounts are denominated in the same currency. Third, in a currency swap, a floating rate is typically exchanged against another floating rate (still there are fixed-fixed currency swaps). On the contrary, an interest rate swap entails the exchange of any pair of legs (floating-floating, fixed-floating, and fixed-fixed). Notwithstanding, both swaps can be valued using the same techniques.
Derivatives
See also
- What Is The Difference Between an Equity Call Swap and a Basis Swap?
- What Is the Role of Variation Margin (VM) in Derivatives?
- What Is the Most Common Type of Credit Derivative?
- What Is a Name?
- How Do a Parisian Option and a Barrier Option Differ?
- What Is the Difference Between Buying a Put and Selling Stock Short?
- How Do Currency Options Work?
- What Does a Low Gamma of an Option Indicate?
- What Is the Difference Between a Digital Option and a Range Option?
- What Is the Difference Between Par Swap Rate, Swap Rate, and Forward Swap Rate?
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