Interest rates are the price of money
When a central bank raises its rate, borrowing gets more expensive and saving gets more rewarding. When it cuts rates, the opposite happens. Currency traders watch these decisions closely because rates change how attractive a currency is to hold.
Here’s the basic logic: higher rates tend to pull in foreign capital chasing better returns, which increases demand for that currency and pushes its value up. Lower rates push capital elsewhere, and the currency tends to weaken. This is why a single sentence from a central bank governor can move a currency pair by a full percent in minutes.
The Big Four Central Banks
● Federal Reserve (US) sets rates for the US dollar, the world’s reserve currency, so its decisions ripple through nearly every currency pair, not just USD pairs. ● European Central Bank (ECB) moves the euro. Because the eurozone includes multiple economies with different needs, ECB decisions often come with more hedging language, and traders parse the tone as much as the number. ● Bank of Japan (BoJ) kept rates near zero for years, so any hint of a shift tends to shake the yen hard, since markets aren’t used to pricing in BoJ tightening. ● Bank of England (BoE) moves the pound, and its decisions often get read alongside UK inflation and jobs data released the same week.
Inflation and Jobs Data Set the Stage
Central banks don’t move rates on a whim. They react to inflation and employment reports. High inflation usually pushes a bank toward raising rates to cool the economy. Weak job numbers can push it toward cutting rates to stimulate growth. So traders don’t just watch the rate decision itself; they watch the data that leads up to it, trying to guess the bank’s next move before it happens.
What This Looks Like in Practice
When the Fed raised rates through 2022 and 2023 to fight inflation, the dollar strengthened against nearly every major currency, and pairs like dropped sharply. When the BoJ signaled it might finally end its ultra-low rate policy, saw sharp, fast swings as traders repriced yen expectations overnight. These aren’t small moves. High-impact rate decisions can produce more volatility in an hour than a currency pair sees in a normal week.
Trading Around Rate Decisions: A Few Practical Notes
● Know the calendar. Rate decisions and major data releases (CPI, jobs reports) are scheduled well in advance. Check an economic calendar before you trade. ● Watch the language, not just the number. Markets often already expect the rate change. What moves prices is whether the bank’s tone is more hawkish or dovish than expected. ● Expect wider spreads. Liquidity can thin out right before and after announcements, so your usual stop-loss distance might not hold. ● Consider sitting out the first few minutes. The initial spike is often followed by a reversal once the market digests the details, so entering right at the headline can mean chasing a move that’s about to snap back. ● Size positions with volatility in mind. A move that would normally take a week can happen in an hour.
Adjust risk accordingly. Rate decisions are one of the few events where a single scheduled announcement can reset a currency’s direction for weeks. Understanding why they matter, and building a plan around them, is one of the more reliable edges a forex trader can develop.












-1024x683.jpg)






