In foreign exchange markets there are four key dates to consider when trading currency options in a particular currency pair:
These dates can be summarised on the following timeline:
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The spot date is always calculated from the horizon date (T). The foreign exchange ( currency or forex or FX) market refers to the market for currencies. A currency is a unit of exchange, facilitating the transfer of Goods and/or services It is one form of Money, where money is Options are financial instruments that convey the right but not the obligation to engage in a future transaction on some Underlying security, or in a Futures In Finance the Spot Date is the normal settlement day for a transaction done today There are two possible cases:
Also, in all cases, no money clears on US holidays, meaning that neither spot nor delivery can take place.
Time to expiry is usually quoted either as “overnight” or in terms of a number of days, weeks, months or years. In general, the expiry date can be any weekday, even if it is a holiday in one, or both of the currencies, except January 1st. There are differing conventions depending on the period involved:
For overnight trades, the expiry date is the next week-day day after the horizon date, and the delivery date is calculated from the expiry date in the same way as spot is calculated from the horizon date. This will result in an expiry date that is before the spot date.
For a trade with a time to expiry of v days, the expiry date is the day v days ahead of the horizon date (unless it is a weekend or January 1st in which case we roll forward until we have a weekday) and for a trade with time to expiry of x weeks, the expiry date is the day 7 x days ahead of the horizon date (unless it is a weekend or January 1st in which case we roll forward until we have a weekday). The delivery date is then calculated from the expiry date in the same way as the spot date is calculated from the horizon date.
For a trade with time to expiry of y months, the expiry date is found by first calculating the spot date, then moving forward y months from the spot date to the delivery date. If the delivery date is a non-business day or a US holiday, move forward until an acceptable delivery date is found. Finally, calculate the expiry date using an “inverse spot” operation, e. g. find the expiry date for which the delivery date would be its spot. When finding the expiry date from the delivery date, there must be one clear business day and one weekday (not including January 1st) in any applicable non-USD / non-CAD currency.
For a trade with time to expiry of z years, the expiry date is found by first calculating the spot date, then moving forward z years from the spot date to the delivery date. If the delivery date is a non-business day or a US holiday, move forward until an acceptable delivery date is found. Finally, calculate the expiry date using an “inverse spot” operation, e. g. find the expiry date for which the delivery date would be its spot. When finding the expiry date from the delivery date, there must be one clear business day and one weekday (not including January 1st) in any applicable non-USD / non-CAD currency.
There are two special cases involving trades that take place around the end of the month and we are trading in month multiples. One defines “target month” to lie x months forward from spot if time to expiry is x months, e. g. if in February, and the time to expiry is three months, the target month is May.