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What Is a Carry Trade? A Practical Explanation (With the JPY Example)

Reviewed by Madhushan, Fintech Developer — April 2026

The carry trade is one of the simplest and most powerful concepts in foreign-exchange markets. It also causes more sudden, violent currency moves than almost any other strategy — when it unwinds, it unwinds fast.

This article explains what a carry trade is, how it works with a real example (the yen carry trade), and why it matters even if you'll never execute one yourself.

The core idea in one sentence

Borrow in a low-yielding currency, invest in a high-yielding one, pocket the interest-rate difference.

That's it. Everything else is plumbing.

A simple example

Imagine two currencies:

CurrencyInterest rate
Japanese yen (JPY)0.25%
Mexican peso (MXN)11.00%

You borrow 1,000,000 JPY at 0.25%. You convert that JPY into MXN at the current exchange rate. You park the MXN in a bank account (or buy a Mexican government bond) earning 11%.

After one year:

You just earned 10.75% per year for doing approximately nothing. That's the carry trade.

The catch: currency risk

The word "assuming" is doing heavy lifting above. Carry trades have one big risk: the exchange rate.

If JPY strengthens against MXN by 5% during the year, you've lost 5% on the currency — eating half your interest-rate gain. If JPY strengthens by 12%, you've lost money on the entire trade despite the interest differential.

This is why carry trades have an asymmetric risk profile:

Why carry trades affect exchange rates

When many traders put on the same carry trade, they all sell the low-yield currency and buy the high-yield one. This pushes the low-yielder down and the high-yielder up — which actually helps the trade work, because currency movement and interest differential both become profitable.

This is why high-yielding currencies (MXN, BRL, TRY, ZAR) tend to strengthen during calm, risk-on periods: steady carry-trade flows support them.

The yen carry trade: the biggest one in the world

The Japanese yen carry trade has been the global foreign-exchange market's dominant flow for 25 years.

Japan kept interest rates near zero from the late 1990s through 2024. Meanwhile, the US, Australia, New Zealand, and emerging markets offered interest rates of 4–15%. Global investors borrowed yen cheaply and invested in higher-yielding currencies — trillions of dollars' worth.

At its peak in 2023, estimates of the yen carry trade's size ranged from $4 trillion to $20 trillion depending on how you counted.

Why JPY makes the ideal funding currency

  1. Lowest rates in the developed world for decades.
  2. Massive, liquid market — you can borrow or sell any amount without moving the price.
  3. Predictable policy — the Bank of Japan rarely surprised markets.
  4. Weakening bias — JPY depreciated steadily against most currencies between 2021 and 2024, which actually added to carry-trade profits.

Carry-trade unwinds: when it gets violent

The problem with carry trades is that they unwind all at once. When risk sentiment turns, everyone races to:

  1. Sell their high-yield positions
  2. Buy back the funding currency they borrowed
  3. Close their exposure

That forced buying of the funding currency causes it to spike upward — which triggers more unwinds, which causes more buying, which causes more spikes.

The August 2024 yen-carry unwind

On 5 August 2024, the yen spiked ~8% in two days after the Bank of Japan raised rates (ending years of ultra-low policy) while the US Federal Reserve signaled cuts. The combination crushed the JPY carry trade:

Traders who had been earning 4–6% per year on the yen carry trade lost 5–10% in days.

This is the asymmetric downside the carry trade always carries.

How to track carry-trade conditions

Three metrics to watch:

1. Interest-rate differential

The spread between the target currency's rate and the funding currency's rate. Bigger spread = bigger potential carry = more attractive trade.

2. Realized volatility

Carry trades work in calm markets and break in volatile ones. FX volatility (e.g., JPY options implied vol) signals regime.

3. Exchange-rate trend

A funding currency in a weakening trend supports carry trades. A sudden reversal (funding currency strengthening) is the warning sign.

You can build a simple dashboard tracking USD/JPY alongside emerging-market currencies to see carry-trade conditions in real time:

curl "https://allratestoday.com/api/v1/rates?source=USD&target=JPY,MXN,BRL,TRY,ZAR,INR" \
  -H "Authorization: Bearer YOUR_API_KEY"

When JPY weakens and emerging-market currencies strengthen, carry trades are working. When JPY spikes and emerging-market currencies fall together, the unwind is starting. The AllRatesToday API exposes all of these in a single call — grab a free key if you want to try it.

Why this matters even if you don't trade FX

Carry-trade unwinds don't just affect currency traders. They ripple through:

The August 2024 yen unwind caused brief but sharp losses across global portfolios. Understanding the carry trade helps you recognize what's happening when it happens next.

Key takeaways

  1. Carry trade = borrow low, invest high, pocket the difference.
  2. The yen carry trade is the biggest one, estimated at $4–20 trillion at peak.
  3. Carry trades work in calm markets and break in volatile ones.
  4. Unwinds are fast and violent — funding currency (JPY) spikes, everything else sells off.
  5. Track JPY and high-yield EMs together to spot carry conditions in real time.

For real-time mid-market rates across all major carry pairs (USD, JPY, MXN, BRL, TRY, ZAR, INR and more), see the AllRatesToday API.

Monitor carry-trade conditions live

Real-time mid-market rates for JPY and high-yield EM currencies. Free tier available.

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