💰 Interest rates are like the price tag on borrowing money. When a country raises its rates, borrowing becomes more expensive but investing becomes more attractive. This can change how much people want the country’s currency, which in turn changes its value against other currencies.
🔍 Key idea: If the domestic interest rate is higher than a foreign rate, the domestic currency usually appreciates (gets stronger). If it is lower, the currency usually depreciates (gets weaker).
📈 Interest‑rate parity shows the relationship mathematically:
\$\frac{S1}{S0} = \frac{1 + i{\text{domestic}}}{1 + i{\text{foreign}}}\$
Where \$S0\$ is the current spot rate, \$S1\$ the future spot rate, \$i{\text{domestic}}\$ the domestic interest rate, and \$i{\text{foreign}}\$ the foreign rate.
| Country | Interest Rate (%) | Currency (vs USD) |
|---|---|---|
| USA | 1.5 | $1 = 1.00 USD |
| Australia | 2.5 | $1 = 0.70 USD |
When the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) raises rates from 2.5% to 3.5%, the Australian dollar (AUD) tends to strengthen against the USD because investors want the higher return on Australian assets.
📌 Interest rate changes are a powerful driver of foreign exchange rates. Think of them as the “fuel” that moves the currency market: higher rates fill the tank, pulling the currency up; lower rates drain it, letting the currency slip down.