A Forward Rate Agreement (FRA) is a financial contract between two parties to lock in an interest rate for a future period, used primarily to hedge against or speculate on interest rate fluctuations. It is an over-the-counter (OTC) derivative instrument, meaning it is customized and not traded on exchanges.
An FRA is an agreement to exchange a fixed interest rate for a floating interest rate (based on a reference rate like MIBOR in India or SOFR globally) on a notional amount for a specified future period. It is cash-settled, meaning only the difference between the fixed and floating rates is paid, not the principal.
In the FRA, typically, a borrower (hedging against rising rates) and a lender (hedging against falling rates), or speculators betting on rate movements.
A company enters a 6x9 FRA with a notional amount of ₹100 crore, agreeing to a fixed rate of 6% against MIBOR for a 3-month period starting 6 months from now.
If, after 6 months, the 3-month MIBOR is 7%, the company receives a payment to offset the higher floating rate.
If MIBOR is 5%, the company pays the counterparty the difference, as it benefits from lower market rates.
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October 25
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