HomeEconomicsMacroeconomics › Exchange Rates

Exchange Rates Explained: How Currencies Are Valued & What Moves Them

An exchange rate is the price of one currency expressed in terms of another. When you see EUR/USD = 1.08, it means one euro costs $1.08. Exchange rates affect everything from import prices and corporate earnings to inflation and interest rate policy.

How Exchange Rates Work

Currencies trade in the foreign exchange (forex) market — the largest financial market in the world with over $7 trillion in daily volume. Exchange rates are set by supply and demand: when more people want to buy dollars, the dollar strengthens; when demand falls, it weakens.

For investors, exchange rates matter because they determine the value of foreign investments when converted back to your home currency. A U.S. investor holding European stocks benefits when the euro strengthens against the dollar (and loses when it weakens), even if the underlying stock price is flat.

Fixed vs Floating Exchange Rates

FeatureFixed (Pegged)Floating (Market-Determined)
How Rate Is SetGovernment/central bank fixes rate to another currency or basketSupply and demand in forex markets
Central Bank RoleMust intervene to maintain the peg (buy/sell reserves)May intervene occasionally but doesn’t target a level
StabilityPredictable for trade and investmentCan be volatile short-term
FlexibilityLimited — can’t adjust to economic shocks easilyAdjusts automatically to economic conditions
RiskSpeculative attacks if peg becomes unsustainableCurrency crises less likely but volatility higher
ExamplesHong Kong dollar (pegged to USD), Saudi riyalUSD, EUR, JPY, GBP

What Drives Exchange Rate Movements

DriverEffect on Currency
Interest Rate DifferentialsHigher rates attract foreign capital → currency strengthens
Inflation DifferentialsLower inflation → currency strengthens (preserves purchasing power)
Trade BalancesSurpluses create demand for domestic currency → strengthens
Capital FlowsForeign investment inflows → demand for currency → strengthens
Economic GrowthStronger growth attracts investment → currency tends to strengthen
Political StabilityUncertainty drives capital outflows → currency weakens
Central Bank PolicyHawkish policy → stronger currency; dovish → weaker
Market SentimentRisk-on flows weaken safe havens (USD, JPY, CHF); risk-off strengthens them

Real vs Nominal Exchange Rates

The nominal exchange rate is the raw rate you see quoted — EUR/USD at 1.08. The real exchange rate adjusts for price level differences between countries. If U.S. prices rise faster than European prices, the real dollar strengthens even if the nominal rate doesn’t change, making U.S. goods less competitive abroad.

The real effective exchange rate (REER) measures a currency against a trade-weighted basket of partners, adjusted for inflation. It’s the best measure of a currency’s true competitiveness. Central banks and trade economists watch the REER closely. See also: purchasing power parity.

How Exchange Rates Affect Investments

Currency exposure is an often-overlooked source of return and risk. When the dollar strengthens, U.S. investors in foreign assets lose on conversion. When the dollar weakens, they gain. For multinational companies, a strong dollar reduces the value of overseas revenues when reported in dollars — a headwind for earnings of companies in the S&P 500 with significant international sales.

Bond investors face similar dynamics. Foreign bond returns combine the local yield plus any currency gain or loss. This is why many institutional investors hedge currency risk on international fixed income — the volatility from currency can exceed the yield.

Analyst Tip
Track the DXY (Dollar Index) for a quick read on dollar strength against major currencies. But remember, DXY is heavily weighted to the euro (~58%). For a broader picture, check the Fed’s trade-weighted dollar indices, which include emerging market currencies.

Key Takeaways

  • Exchange rates are set by supply and demand in the $7+ trillion daily forex market.
  • Interest rate differentials, inflation, trade balances, and capital flows are the primary drivers.
  • Fixed exchange rates offer stability but are vulnerable to speculative attacks; floating rates adjust automatically.
  • Currency movements directly impact international investment returns, corporate earnings, and import prices.
  • The real exchange rate (adjusted for inflation) is a better measure of competitiveness than the nominal rate.

Frequently Asked Questions

What causes exchange rates to fluctuate?

Exchange rates move based on interest rate differentials, inflation expectations, trade flows, capital flows, political events, and market sentiment. Central bank policy decisions — especially unexpected ones — are among the biggest short-term movers of currency markets.

How does a strong dollar affect U.S. investors?

A strong dollar reduces the value of foreign investments when converted back to USD, hurting international equity returns. It also pressures earnings of U.S. multinationals with significant overseas revenue. Conversely, it makes imports cheaper and helps keep domestic inflation lower.

What is the difference between fixed and floating exchange rates?

Fixed rates are maintained by government intervention — the central bank buys or sells reserves to keep the rate at a target. Floating rates are determined by market forces. Most major currencies (USD, EUR, JPY) float freely, while some emerging markets and smaller economies maintain pegs.

How do interest rates affect exchange rates?

Higher interest rates attract foreign capital seeking better returns, increasing demand for the currency and pushing it higher. This is why Fed rate decisions move the dollar — and why currency traders obsess over rate differentials between countries.

What is the DXY Dollar Index?

The DXY measures the U.S. dollar against a basket of six major currencies: euro (57.6%), Japanese yen (13.6%), British pound (11.9%), Canadian dollar (9.1%), Swedish krona (4.2%), and Swiss franc (3.6%). It’s the most widely followed gauge of dollar strength but is euro-heavy.