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An exporter that exports from Country with currency A to Country with currency B may wish to buy call option to exchange currency B to currency A to reduce currency risk.
That's a normal financial operation that is done in the course of normal business - it does not pursue goal to enrich oneself on constantly changing exchange rates, no - all it does is provides some certainity by reducing currency risk in exchange for some known cost.
I'd love to have a coherent argument, but I'm pretty wasted. Maybe tomorrow...
An exporter that exports from Country with currency A to Country with currency B may wish to buy call option to exchange currency B to currency A to reduce currency risk.
That's a normal financial operation that is done in the course of normal business - it does not pursue goal to enrich oneself on constantly changing exchange rates, no - all it does is provides some certainity by reducing currency risk in exchange for some known cost.
It would not be speculation, which in Wikipedia defined as: "In finance, speculation is a financial action that does not promise safety of the initial investment along with the return on the principal sum"
A long term call option on a currency would be a hedging operation, perfectly valid use of derivatives. There is good economic sense in it, unlike spread betting and buying/selling such options all day long just to make money on difference in rates.
It would not be speculation, which in Wikipedia defined as: "In finance, speculation is a financial action that does not promise safety of the initial investment along with the return on the principal sum"
A long term call option on a currency would be a hedging operation, perfectly valid use of derivatives. There is good economic sense in it, unlike spread betting and buying/selling such options all day long just to make money on difference in rates.
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