The benchmark interest rate set by a central bank, from which all other lending and deposit rates in the economy are derived. Also called the policy rate, key rate, or bank rate.
What Is a Base Rate?
The base rate is the Interest Rate at which a Central Bank lends to commercial banks or the rate used for interbank overnight lending. It serves as the foundation for all other interest rates in the economy, including mortgage rates, savings rates, and corporate borrowing costs. Different central banks use different names: the Federal Reserve sets the federal funds rate, the Bank of England sets the Bank Rate, and the European Central Bank sets the main refinancing rate.
Base Rates and Forex
When traders refer to a country's "rate," they typically mean its base rate. Comparing base rates across countries reveals the interest rate differential that drives currency flows. For example, if the Bank of England's base rate is 5.25% and the Bank of Japan's is 0.10%, the 515 Basis Point spread creates strong demand for GBP/JPY carry trades, supporting GBP against JPY.
Market Expectations vs. Actual Changes
Forex markets price in expected base rate changes well before they occur, using interest rate futures and overnight index swaps. If markets expect a 25 basis point hike and the central bank delivers exactly that, the currency may barely move. Surprises, whether in the rate decision, the accompanying statement's tone (Hawkish vs. Dovish), or Forward Guidance about future moves, generate the largest forex reactions.
Related Terms
Interest Rate
The cost of borrowing money, set by central banks as a primary monetary policy tool. Interest rate differentials between countries are the dominant driver of forex exchange rates.
Basis Point
A unit of measurement equal to one hundredth of a percentage point (0.01%). Used to express changes in interest rates, bond yields, and other financial percentages with precision.
Central Bank
A national or supranational institution responsible for managing a country's monetary policy, controlling the money supply, setting interest rates, and maintaining financial stability.
Bank of England
The central bank of the United Kingdom, responsible for setting monetary policy through the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) and managing the British pound sterling (GBP).
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