Forward Exchange Rates: Forward Points, Outright Rates, and Premiums
Forward exchange rates lock in the price for exchanging currencies at a future date. In professional FX markets, dealers rarely quote full forward rates. Instead, they quote forward points — a shorthand that makes it easier to update quotes as market rates change. Understanding how to read forward point quotes and convert them to outright forward rates is essential for anyone working with currency hedging, international investments, or cross-border transactions. For related FX mechanics, see our guides on FX Cross Rates and the Forward Price Calculator.
What Are Forward Points?
Forward points (often called swap points) are the difference between the forward exchange rate and the spot exchange rate, scaled to match the precision of the spot quote. They are expressed in pips — the smallest price increment for a currency pair.
Forward points primarily reflect the interest rate differential between two currencies. However, actual dealer quotes also incorporate cross-currency basis, funding and liquidity conditions, bid-ask spreads, and credit adjustments.
When forward points are positive, the base currency trades at a forward premium — the forward rate is higher than the spot rate. When forward points are negative, the base currency trades at a forward discount — the forward rate is lower than the spot rate.
Dealers quote forward points rather than full rates because the spot rate changes constantly throughout the trading day. By quoting only the differential, dealers can update a single number (the spot rate) while keeping forward point quotes relatively stable.
Outright Forwards vs Forward Points
There are two ways to express a forward exchange rate:
Outright Forward
- The complete forward exchange rate
- Example: EUR/USD 3M at 1.09484 (mid)
- Used in trade confirmations and settlements
- What you actually trade at
Forward Points
- The scaled difference from spot
- Example: EUR/USD 3M at +98.4 points (mid)
- Used in interbank dealing screens
- Easier to quote and update
Note: The examples above show simplified mid-market values. The full bid-ask mechanics are demonstrated in the quote table section below.
To convert forward points to an outright forward rate, you add the scaled points to the spot rate. The scaling depends on the currency pair’s decimal convention.
Scaling Conventions: Standard vs JPY Pairs
Forward points must be scaled before adding them to the spot rate. The scaling factor matches the number of decimal places in the spot quote:
| Currency Pair Type | Spot Decimals | Scale Factor | Example Pairs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard pairs | 4 decimal places | Divide points by 10,000 | EUR/USD, GBP/USD, AUD/USD |
| JPY pairs | 2 decimal places | Divide points by 100 | USD/JPY, EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY |
Note that some less common currency pairs may use different decimal conventions. Always confirm the pip convention for the specific pair you are trading.
Reading a Forward Quote Table
Professional FX dealers display forward quotes in a table showing bid and ask points for each tenor. Here is an example EUR/USD forward quote table:
| Tenor | Bid Points | Ask Points |
|---|---|---|
| Spot | 1.0850 / 1.0852 | |
| 1 Week | +7.8 | +8.6 |
| 1 Month | +31.5 | +33.5 |
| 3 Months | +97.8 | +99.0 |
| 6 Months | +194.2 | +197.2 |
| 12 Months | +385.0 | +389.4 |
To calculate the all-in forward rate, combine the spot bid/ask with the corresponding forward point bid/ask:
Given: Spot bid/ask = 1.0850 / 1.0852, 3M points bid/ask = +97.8 / +99.0
Step 1: Scale the points by dividing by 10,000
- Bid points: 97.8 / 10,000 = 0.00978
- Ask points: 99.0 / 10,000 = 0.00990
Step 2: Add scaled points to spot rates
- Forward bid: 1.0850 + 0.00978 = 1.09478
- Forward ask: 1.0852 + 0.00990 = 1.09510
Result: The 3-month EUR/USD forward rate is 1.09478 / 1.09510
The absolute size of forward points often grows with longer tenors when the interest rate differential maintains the same sign. However, yield curve shapes, cross-currency basis movements, and market conditions can alter this pattern. For the underlying theory, see our guide on Interest Rate Parity.
JPY Pairs: Different Scaling
Japanese yen pairs are quoted to two decimal places, so forward points are divided by 100 instead of 10,000. The points themselves may include fractional pips.
Given: Spot = 154.25, 3-month forward points = -112.5
Step 1: Scale the points: -112.5 / 100 = -1.125
Step 2: Add to spot: 154.25 + (-1.125) = 153.125
Note: The outright forward (153.125) has three decimal places because the forward points included a fractional pip (-112.5). This is common in dealer quotes.
The negative points indicate USD trades at a forward discount against JPY.
Forward Premium vs Forward Discount
The sign of forward points tells you whether the base currency trades at a premium or discount for forward delivery:
| Forward Points | Condition | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Positive (+) | Forward > Spot | Base currency trades at a forward premium |
| Negative (-) | Forward < Spot | Base currency trades at a forward discount |
Premium and discount terminology always refers to the base currency (the first currency in the pair). If EUR/USD trades at a forward premium, the euro is priced higher for forward delivery than for spot delivery. This typically occurs when eurozone interest rates are lower than U.S. rates.
For the economic relationship between interest rates and forward premiums/discounts, see our article on Interest Rate Parity. For how traders exploit forward premiums, see Carry Trade Strategies.
Annualizing the Forward Premium or Discount
To compare forward premiums across different tenors or against interest rate differentials, convert the percentage premium to an annualized figure:
Where:
- F — forward exchange rate (outright)
- S — spot exchange rate
- days — number of days to forward settlement
- 360 — day count for Actual/360 convention (use 365 for Actual/365)
Given: EUR/USD spot = 1.0850, 3-month outright forward = 1.09478
Assumption: 90-day tenor using Actual/360 convention
Calculation:
((1.09478 – 1.0850) / 1.0850) × (360 / 90) × 100 = 3.61%
The euro trades at an annualized forward premium of approximately 3.61% against the dollar.
Limitations
The examples in this article are illustrative. Actual dealing rates include bid-ask spreads that widen during volatile markets or for less liquid currency pairs.
1. Quotes change continuously. Interest rate differentials, cross-currency basis, and liquidity conditions shift throughout the trading day. Forward points quoted in the morning may differ significantly by afternoon.
2. Credit and counterparty adjustments apply. Dealer quotes assume standard credit terms. Actual forward rates for a specific client may include credit valuation adjustments.
3. Forward rates do not predict future spot rates. A forward premium does not mean the base currency will appreciate. Empirical research consistently shows that forward rates are poor predictors of future spot rates — a phenomenon known as the forward premium puzzle.
4. Bid-ask spreads vary. The examples above use representative spreads, but actual spreads depend on currency pair liquidity, trade size, and market conditions.
Common Mistakes
1. Forgetting to scale forward points. Raw points like +98.4 cannot be added directly to a spot rate of 1.0850. You must divide by 10,000 first (or 100 for JPY pairs).
2. Using the wrong scale factor for JPY. Dividing USD/JPY points by 10,000 instead of 100 produces an answer that is off by a factor of 100.
3. Confusing which currency is at a premium. Forward premium/discount refers to the base currency. In EUR/USD, positive points mean EUR (not USD) trades at a premium.
4. Sign errors with negative points. When points are negative, confirm you are subtracting from (not adding to) the spot rate. Alternatively, keep the sign and add algebraically.
5. Ignoring bid-ask spreads. Using only mid-market points understates actual transaction costs. Always use bid/ask points that match your trade direction.
6. Assuming forward rates predict spot rates. Trading based on the assumption that forward rates forecast future spot rates is not supported by empirical evidence.
Forward points are a compact way to quote the interest rate differential between two currencies. Master the scaling conventions, understand bid-ask mechanics, and remember that forward rates lock in prices — they do not predict where spot rates will go.
Frequently Asked Questions
Disclaimer
This article is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Forward exchange rates involve currency risk and are subject to market volatility. Always conduct your own research and consult a qualified financial professional before entering into any foreign exchange transactions.