Uncovered Interest Rate Parity (UIP)
Uncovered interest rate parity (UIP) is a financial theory that links interest rate differentials between two countries to expected changes in their exchange rate. It predicts that a currency with a higher nominal interest rate will tend to depreciate relative to a lower-yielding currency by roughly the interest-rate gap, eliminating risk-free gains from investing across currencies without hedging.
Key points
- UIP equates expected exchange-rate movements with interest-rate differentials.
- It does not use forward contracts; investors are exposed to exchange-rate risk.
- In formula form, expected future spot equals the current spot adjusted by the interest-rate ratio.
- Empirical evidence is mixed: UIP often fails in the short and medium term (carry trade profits), though it remains a useful theoretical benchmark.
Intuition and connection to arbitrage
UIP builds on the law of one price and purchasing-power parity ideas: differences in returns on otherwise identical risk-free assets should be offset by expected currency movements. If one could borrow in a low-rate currency and invest in a high-rate currency without exchange-rate changes, a risk-free profit would exist. UIP says expected exchange-rate changes eliminate that profit.
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Formula and calculation
A common expression of UIP is:
E[S1] = S0 * (1 + i_dom) / (1 + i_for)
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where:
* E[S1] = expected future spot exchange rate (price of one unit of foreign currency in domestic currency)
* S0 = current spot exchange rate
* i_dom = domestic nominal interest rate
* i_for = foreign nominal interest rate
Approximation (for small rates):
Expected percentage change in the spot ≈ i_dom − i_for
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Example:
* S0 = 1.50 (domestic currency per unit of foreign currency)
* i_dom = 5% (0.05), i_for = 2% (0.02)
E[S1] = 1.50 * (1.05 / 1.02) ≈ 1.5441
This implies the foreign currency is expected to appreciate (or the domestic currency is expected to depreciate) by about 2.74% over the period.
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UIP vs. Covered Interest Rate Parity (CIP)
- CIP uses the forward exchange rate to lock in returns: F0 = S0 * (1 + i_dom) / (1 + i_for). Because the forward contract removes exchange-rate risk, CIP prevents arbitrage in covered transactions and tends to hold tightly in practice.
- UIP replaces the forward rate with the expected future spot rate and leaves exchange-rate risk unhedged. UIP depends on expectations and risk premia and therefore is less reliable empirically.
Limitations and empirical challenges
- Empirical rejection: UIP often does not hold in the short and medium term. High-yielding currencies sometimes appreciate rather than depreciate, enabling profitable carry trades.
- Risk premia: Investors may require compensation for bearing exchange-rate risk; UIP assumes zero or predictable risk premia.
- Market frictions: Transaction costs, capital controls, and limited capital mobility can break UIP.
- Expectation errors: UIP assumes rational and unbiased expectations about future exchange rates; if expectations are biased, UIP fails.
- Time horizon: UIP may perform differently over short, medium, and long horizons.
Practical implications
- UIP is a core concept in macro-finance models and is useful for thinking about how interest rates and exchange rates interact.
- It is not a reliable short-term trading rule — unhedged carry trades have historically produced returns that contradict UIP.
- For hedged positions, CIP-derived relationships (using forwards) are more actionable.
Short FAQs
Q: What is uncovered interest arbitrage?
A: Borrowing in a low-rate currency and investing the proceeds in a high-rate currency without hedging the currency exposure. Profitable only if exchange-rate moves do not offset the interest differential.
Q: Does UIP hold in practice?
A: Not consistently. It is a useful theoretical benchmark, but empirical evidence shows frequent deviations due to risk premia, expectations errors, and market frictions.
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Q: When is CIP preferred over UIP?
A: When investors want to eliminate exchange-rate risk. CIP (forward hedging) is generally more reliable for arbitrage and pricing because it relies on observable forward rates rather than expectations.
Conclusion
UIP provides a clean theoretical link between interest-rate differentials and expected exchange-rate movements. Its assumptions—efficient markets, unbiased expectations, and absent frictions—often fail in practice, so UIP should be used as an analytical starting point rather than a precise forecasting or trading rule.