Exchange Currency

yen carry trade

A specific example of a currency carry trade, where an investor will exchange a specific amount of Japanese Yen for another currency with a higher interest rate, and then will invest the new currency in hopes of earning more interest than could have been earned with the yen.

Related information about yen carry trade:
  1. Currency Carry Trade Definition | Investopedia
    Here's an example of a "yen carry trade": a trader borrows 1,000 Japanese yen from a Japanese bank, converts the funds into U.S. dollars and buys a bond for ...
     
  2. Carry (investment) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    By early year 2007, it was estimated that some US$1 trillion may have been staked on the yen carry trade. Since the mid-90's, the Bank of Japan has set ...
     
  3. The Day The Yen Carry Trade Died | ZeroHedge
    Mar 16, 2011 ... And if the Yen carry trade is done, the question is when will the USD, which has also been a carry currency for some time, follow suit. And, once ...
     
  4. What is the yen carry trade? - MoneyWeek
    Aug 24, 2007 ... The end of the yen carry trade could devastate markets throughout the world. But what is this trade, and why could its unravelling have such ...
     
  5. Yen carry trade is back, but it may not last - MarketWatch
    Apr 4, 2011 ... SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) — The yen carry trade — borrowing against the yen to buy higher-yielding assets — has returned as a ...
     
  6. The Japanese yen, carry trade and tail risk | East Asia Forum
    Sep 28, 2012 ... Author: Ippei Fujiwara, ANU It is recognised that the currency of a country with high interest rates tends to appreciate. This sounds like an ...
     
  7. What is a yen carry trade? - MoneyWeek Investment Tutorials ...
    Mar 17, 2011 ... To receive Tim's 50 FREE MoneyWeek Basics emails: http://bit.ly/mwk-basics In investment circles the 'yen carry trade' has been gathering ...
     
  8. Is The Yen Carry Trade Ready To Return? | Currencies - Minyanville
    Mar 26, 2012 ... Japan's war on its own currency supports global risk markets.