Economic Development

Navigating the waters of foreign exchange and international payments

December 16, 2014

Global

December 16, 2014

Global
Carolyn Whelan

Senior editor, Americas

Carolyn is a senior editor for The Economist Intelligence Unit's thought leadership division in the Americas. She manages research programs for foundations and corporations on topics ranging from urbanization and jobs to sustainability and youth economic prospects. She has over 20 years’ experience in journalism. Until 2013 Carolyn contributed articles to Fortune, Newsweek, the IHT and SciAm.com about urbanization, infrastructure, trade, technology and transportation, among other topics. She has also written materials for Ernst & Young, Columbia Business School and the United Nations. Earlier Carolyn covered the technology and healthcare beats for Barron’s Online and Dow Jones Newswires in Paris, respectively. She broke into journalism covering the 1992 Earth Summit and subsequently worked for the World Wildlife Fund in Switzerland. Ms. Whelan holds a B.A. in Communications from the University of Virginia and is a 2006 Columbia Business School Knight-Bagehot Fellow. She is Swiss and American, and speaks fluent French and Spanish.

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Worldwide equity and debt markets have surged in recent decades, but less-celebrated foreign exchange (FX or forex) dwarfs both. One day of FX trading beats average daily trading in global stock markets by 28 to 1. Yet the world’s largest and most active marketplace lacks the understanding its impact merits. This report explores the risks, challenges and opportunities of this large and complex market.

Report Summary

Superlatives sound commonplace in the financial industry, but foreign exchange earns them year in and year out. It is by a wide margin the world’s largest, most liquid marketplace.

Yet, surprisingly, FX, the world’s largest and most active marketplace, often lacks for the attention its size merits.  

This lack of visibility comes with intrinsic risks, as exposure to currency fluctuations can make foreign exchange a perilous blind spot.  

Companies with global aspirations or facing global competition need a firm handle on currency markets. Left to an afterthought, FX invites unwanted consequences to the bottom line. Treated with due respect, FX supports liquidity, credit relationships, ample cash flow and healthy bottom lines.

This report explores the risks, challenges and opportunities of the FX market and highlights strategies experts use to manage this large and complex market. 

Foreign exchange adds a great deal of complexity to our work.

-Peter Buijs, CFO of CARE

 

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