Enter Values
Formula
Model Assumptions
- Pure exchange rate quote math (no economic causality modeled).
- Mid-market rates assumed (bid-ask spread ignored).
- Point-in-time comparison (no time-series analysis).
- Direct quote = domestic per foreign; Indirect quote = foreign per domestic.
For educational purposes. Not financial advice.
Calculation Results
Conversion Comparison
Formula Breakdown
Interpretation Guide
| Convention | Quote Rises | Quote Falls |
|---|---|---|
| Direct (domestic per foreign) |
Domestic depreciates | Domestic appreciates |
| Indirect (foreign per domestic) |
Domestic appreciates | Domestic depreciates |
Understanding Currency Appreciation and Depreciation
What is Currency Appreciation?
Currency appreciation occurs when a currency increases in value relative to another currency. If the US dollar appreciates against the euro, each dollar buys more euros than before. Conversely, depreciation means the currency buys less of the other currency.
Direct vs. Indirect Quotes
Exchange rates can be quoted in two ways:
- Direct quote (domestic per foreign): Shows how much domestic currency is needed for one unit of foreign currency. Example: 1.10 USD per 1 EUR means you need 1.10 dollars to buy one euro.
- Indirect quote (foreign per domestic): Shows how much foreign currency you get for one unit of domestic currency. Example: 0.91 EUR per 1 USD means one dollar buys 0.91 euros.
Example: If 1.10 rises to 1.21 (a 10% increase), the reciprocal falls from 0.909 to 0.826 (only 9.09% decrease).
This asymmetry is a common source of confusion.
How Quote Changes Relate to Currency Direction
The relationship between quote changes and currency direction depends on the convention:
- Direct quote rises: More domestic currency needed per foreign unit. The domestic currency has depreciated.
- Direct quote falls: Less domestic currency needed per foreign unit. The domestic currency has appreciated.
- Indirect quote rises: More foreign currency per domestic unit. The domestic currency has appreciated.
- Indirect quote falls: Less foreign currency per domestic unit. The domestic currency has depreciated.
Frequently Asked Questions
Disclaimer
This calculator is for educational purposes only. It performs pure exchange rate quote math and does not model economic causality, forecast future rates, or provide investment advice. Actual exchange rate movements are influenced by numerous factors not captured in this simple percentage-change calculation. This tool should not be used for trading or investment decisions.
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