Question 1
The "Real Effective Exchange Rate" (REER) is the Nominal Effective Exchange Rate (NEER) adjusted for:
View Explanation
REER takes the NEER (weighted average of nominal exchange rates) and adjusts it for relative inflation rates. It is a better indicator of a country's trade competitiveness.
Question 2
A "Forex Swap" transaction involves:
View Explanation
A typical forex swap consists of a spot transaction and a simultaneous forward transaction in the opposite direction. It is used to manage liquidity or hedge risk without open currency exposure.
Question 3
If the Forward Rate of a currency is higher than its Spot Rate, the currency is said to be trading at a:
View Explanation
When Forward Rate > Spot Rate, the currency is at a Premium. When Forward Rate < Spot Rate, it is at a Discount.
Question 4
A "Non-Deliverable Forward" (NDF) is a forex derivative contract traded:
View Explanation
NDF markets (like in Singapore or London for INR) allow trading in currencies that have restricted convertibility. Settlement is done in a convertible currency (usually USD), with no delivery of the underlying domestic currency.
Question 5
In India, if the exchange rate is quoted as "USD 1 = INR 82.50", this is an example of a:
View Explanation
A Direct Quote expresses the price of one unit of foreign currency in terms of domestic currency (e.g., how many Rupees for 1 Dollar). India follows the Direct Quote system. An Indirect Quote would be INR 1 = USD 0.012.
Question 6
The theory that states spot exchange rates change to equalize the purchasing power of currencies in their respective countries is called:
View Explanation
PPP theory asserts that exchange rates between currencies are in equilibrium when their purchasing power is the same in each of the two countries. It is based on the "Law of One Price".
Question 7
Currency Futures in India are traded on:
View Explanation
Currency Futures are standardized contracts traded on exchanges (NSE, BSE, MSEI). In contrast, Currency Forwards are traded OTC between banks and clients.
Question 8
The "Foreign Exchange Dealers Association of India" (FEDAI) primarily:
View Explanation
FEDAI is an association of banks dealing in forex. It frames rules for the conduct of inter-bank forex business and issues guidelines to Authorized Dealers, under RBI's overall supervision.
Question 9
A "Nostro Account" implies:
View Explanation
Nostro (Latin for "Ours") refers to a bank's account held in a foreign bank in that foreign country's currency (e.g., SBI holding a USD account with Citibank NY).
Question 10
If the exchange rate of USD/INR is 82.00 and GBP/USD is 1.25, what is the implied "Cross Rate" for GBP/INR?
View Explanation
To find GBP/INR, we multiply GBP/USD by USD/INR. (1.25 * 82.00 = 102.50). This calculation is used when a direct quote between two currencies is not available or to check for arbitrage opportunities.
Question 11
Which type of account allows an NRI to deposit income earned in India (like rent, dividends) and has restricted repatriability?
View Explanation
The Non-Resident Ordinary (NRO) account is for managing income earned in India. Interest earned is taxable, and repatriation is limited (currently USD 1 million per financial year). NRE accounts are for foreign earnings and are fully repatriable.
Question 12
Under the Liberalized Remittance Scheme (LRS), what is the maximum amount a resident individual can remit overseas per financial year?
View Explanation
Resident individuals can remit up to USD 250,000 per financial year for permissible current or capital account transactions under LRS.
Question 13
The rate at which a bank buys foreign currency from a customer (exporter/individual) is known as the:
View Explanation
When a customer wants to convert foreign currency into rupees, the bank "buys" the FCY. The rate applied is the TT Buying Rate or Bill Buying Rate, which is lower than the selling rate.
Question 14
"Arbitrage" in forex markets refers to:
View Explanation
Arbitrage exploits price inefficiencies between markets for risk-free profit.