Earning Daily Dividends in Forex
Article Summary: Buying currencies with high overnight rates and using reasonable amounts of leverage is what the
carry trade is all about.The amount of interest earned on open positions is something each trader should be aware of when entering long term Forex trades.
If you have traded currencies, you have likely experienced a time where the changes in your account balance did not match up with your trades P/L. In most of these situations, your account accrued these extraneous gains and losses from rollover interest.
Each evening at 5pm Eastern (
or 9am Aussie time), there is an overnight interest rate applied to your account for holding specific currencies. You earn interest on currencies you hold long and must pay interest on currencies you hold short. Using this logic, you will earn higher rollover when buying high yielding currencies (like AUD, NZD, CAD and
exotics) against low yielding currencies (like CHF, EUR, JPY and USD.)
The chart below shows the overnight rate for major currencies. This is updated each day on
www.dailyfx.com homepage.
View attachment 900443
A long 10k AUD/USD position pays roughly $0.50 per day in roll. Multiplying $0.50 by 365 days in a year comes out to an estimated annual return of $182.50. Since 10k AUD/USD position is worth $10,400 in USD, your annual percentage return is 1.75%. This doesnt even consider the P/L on the underlying trade. So if your trade was profitable at the end of the trade as well, its an additional bonus to an already winning position.
If adding on an additional 1.75% in your account annually doesnt catch your attention, consider this point. The Forex market is very generous when it comes to available leverage. If you leverage your account 2x, 3x or even 4x, your rollover interest return would multiply by the same factor.
So rather than having $10,400 USD in your trading account to hold a 10k AUD/USD position, lets say you had $2600 (using 4:1 effective leverage). A 10k trade would still yield $0.50 per day in roll or $182.50 a year, but your annual return on your $2600 would be 7.02%. And like before, the 7.02% does not even take into account the P/L of the position. If you made money on the position itself, you got a nice return on the investment for the year. But even if you didnt make money on the trade, you had a 7.02% buffer against any losses suffered.
So when considering rollover, remember these 3 principles:
- Buy currencies with high overnight rates and sell currencies with low overnight rates.
- Look for long-term trading opportunities. The longer you hold onto your positions, the more roll you will collect.
- Use reasonable amounts of leverage to amplify your percentage return. To learn more about reasonable effective leverage, click here.
Good trading!
---Written by Rob Pasche
https://www.dailyfx.com/forex/educa...3/03/20/Earning_Daily_Dividends_in_Forex.html