Enter Values
Notation Reference
| r1 | Spot rate for period t1 |
| r2 | Spot rate for period t2 |
| t1 | Shorter time period |
| t2 | Longer time period |
| f | Forward rate from t1 to t2 |
Calculation Result
Formula Breakdown
Forward Rate Interpretation
| Typical Pattern | Yield Curve Shape | Common Interpretation |
|---|---|---|
| f > r2 > r1 | Upward Sloping | Rising rates or term premium |
| f ≈ r2 ≈ r1 | Flat | Stable outlook |
| f < r2 < r1 | Inverted | Falling rates expected |
Understanding Forward Rates
What is a Forward Rate?
A forward interest rate is the implied rate for a future period, derived from current spot rates. For example, the "1-year rate, 1 year forward" is the implied 1-year rate that will begin 1 year from today. Forward rates are calculated using the no-arbitrage principle that connects spot rates of different maturities.
Solved: f = [(1 + r2)t2 / (1 + r1)t1]1/(t2-t1) - 1
The No-Arbitrage Principle
The forward rate relationship must hold to prevent arbitrage opportunities. If you invest $1 for t2 years at rate r2, you should get the same result as investing for t1 years at r1 and then reinvesting for (t2-t1) years at the forward rate f.
Forward Rates and the Yield Curve
Upward-Sloping Curve
Forward rates exceed spot rates. Under the expectations hypothesis, this suggests markets anticipate rising rates—though term premiums can also explain higher forward rates. This is the most common yield curve shape.
Inverted Curve
Forward rates are below spot rates. This may signal expectations of falling rates, though other factors can contribute. Often observed before economic slowdowns.
Practical Applications
- FRA Pricing: Forward Rate Agreements lock in forward rates for hedging
- Swap Valuation: Forward rates are used to price interest rate swaps
- Yield Curve Analysis: Forward rates reveal market expectations
- Bond Portfolio Management: Riding the yield curve strategies
Frequently Asked Questions
Disclaimer
This calculator is for educational purposes only. Forward rates derived from this calculator assume discrete annual compounding. Actual market calculations may use different compounding conventions (e.g., continuous compounding, semi-annual) and day count methods. Forward rates are implied rates, not predictions of future rates. Consult a qualified professional for investment decisions.