If you have a variable-rate loan, such as a business loan tied to an index like SOFR, your payments can rise unexpectedly with market interest rates, creating financial uncertainty. A Forward Rate Agreement (FRA) acts as a financial hedge that locks in an interest rate for a future period, providing financial predictability and mitigating the risk of rising costs.
How a Forward Rate Agreement Works
An FRA is a customized, private (over-the-counter) contract between two parties. It involves no exchange of principal; instead, it fixes an interest rate on a hypothetical “notional principal” for a set period in the future. Upon settlement, the contract compares the agreed fixed rate (contract rate) to the actual market reference rate (like the 3-month SOFR). The difference between these rates is settled in cash:
- If the market rate is higher than the fixed rate, the FRA seller pays the buyer the difference.
- If the market rate is lower, the buyer pays the seller.
This cash payment offsets unexpected changes in the borrower’s loan interest payments.
Example
Suppose Sarah owns a business and has a $1 million variable-rate loan tied to SOFR plus margin. Concerned about rising rates, she enters into an FRA with the following terms:
- Notional principal: $1,000,000
- Contract (fixed) rate: 5.0%
- Reference rate: 3-month SOFR
- Settlement: in 3 months
If after three months the SOFR rises to 6.0%, Sarah’s loan interest payments increase, but her FRA payout compensates her for the 1.0% higher rate on the notional amount, offsetting the cost. Conversely, if SOFR falls to 4.0%, Sarah pays on the FRA but benefits from lower loan payments, keeping her overall interest cost stable.
Who Uses FRAs?
- Borrowers with variable-rate loans: To lock in future borrowing costs and reduce interest rate risk.
- Lenders and financial institutions: To hedge the risk of changes in interest rates on issued loans.
- Investors and traders: To speculate or hedge interest rate exposure without holding the underlying loans.
Key Features of a Forward Rate Agreement
Feature | Description | Importance |
---|---|---|
Hedging Tool | Locks in future interest rates for a set period | Stabilizes borrowing costs and budgets |
Notional Principal | Hypothetical amount used to calculate payments | No actual loan amount exchanged |
Cash Settlement | Difference paid between contract and market rates | Simplifies transactions without exchanging assets |
OTC Contract | Customized private agreement | Allows specific tailoring to loan needs |
Common Misconceptions
- FRA is not a loan: It’s a derivative contract based on interest rates; principal is never exchanged.
- Not about making money: For borrowers, the aim is to minimize risk and create predictable costs, not to profit from the FRA.
For business owners and borrowers with variable-rate debt, an FRA can be a crucial tool to manage interest rate uncertainty effectively.
For more on managing loan costs, see our glossary articles on Variable Interest Rate and Business Loan Default.
Sources:
- Investopedia: Forward Rate Agreement (FRA)
- Corporate Finance Institute: Forward Rate Agreement
- IRS Publication 550 – Investment Income and Expenses (for general derivative tax considerations)