Hedge (Currency) - Explained
What is a Currency Hedge?
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What is a Currency Hedge?
Currency hedging is similar to insurance, which you buy to protect yourself from an unforeseen event. Currency hedging is an attempt to reduce the effects of currency fluctuations on investment performance.
To hedge an investment, investment managers will set up a related currency investment designed to offset changes in the value of the Canadian dollar. In general, currency hedging reduces the increase or decrease in the value of an investment due to changes in the exchange rate. In other words, it aims to even out results.
Related Topics
- What Does it Mean to Dollarize
- Foreign Exchange Market
- Who Demands and Supplies Currency in a Foreign Exchange Market?
- Foreign Direct Investment
- Greenfield Investment
- Brownfield Investment
- Portfolio Investment
- Hedging
- Dealers in the Interbank Market
- Weak and Strong Currency
- Depreciation of Currency
- Appreciating and Depreciating Currency
- Exchange Rate
- Real Effective Exchange Rate (REER)
- Limited Flexibility Exchange Rate System
- Expectations about Future Exchange Rates Shift Demand
- Expected rate of return shift demand and supply for a currency
- Relative Inflation Shifts Demand and Supply for a Currency
- Purchasing Power Parity (PPP)
- Relative Purchasing Power Parity
- Law of One Price
- Burgernomics
- Balassa-Samuelson Effect
- Arbitrage
- Tobin Tax
- Foreign Exchange Market
- Foreign Exchange Contract
- Arbitrage
- Hedge
- Why Central Banks Care About Exchange Rates
- How Do Exchange Rates Affect Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply?
- What Causes Exchange Rate Fluctuations?
- Exchange Rate Policy
- Fixed Exchange Rate
- Floating Exchange Rate
- Hard and Soft Peg
- What is a Merged Currency?
- Capital Control
- Exchange Stabilization Fund