Forward-forward agreement
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In business and contract law, a future-forward agreement (FFA) is a form of forward rate agreement in which party A agrees to lend party B the m1 amount of money, at future time t1. In return, B will pay to A a larger monetary amount m2 at time t2 > t1. The name "future-forward agreement" derives from the fact that both issuing and repayment of the loan take place in the future. A regular forward rate agreement lends the money at once. A quoted forward rate is associated with every future-forward agreement. This can be thought of as the interest rate earned by party A for lending the money to B.[1]
[edit] Example
John goes to his bank today. He agrees to take out a loan of $10,000 from the bank in one year's time, and will pay back the loan with $10,800 in two years' time. The forward rate would be ($10,800/$10,000)-1=8%.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Keith Redhead (2003). Introducing Investments: A Personal Finance Approach. Pearson Education, 307. ISBN 027367305X.

