Direct Quote A direct quote expresses an exchange rate as the amount of domestic currency required to buy one unit of foreign currency. In a direct quote, the foreign currency is the base currency and the domestic currency is the quote (or counter) currency. Which currency is β€œdomestic” depends on the location of the trader or the convention being used. How direct quotes work
* Notation: base/quote (e.g., EUR/USD). A direct quote shows quote currency per one unit of base currency.
* Interpretation: an increase in a direct quote means the domestic currency is weakening (it takes more domestic units to buy one unit of foreign currency); a decrease means the domestic currency is strengthening.
* Reciprocal relationship: a direct quote and an indirect quote are reciprocals.
* DQ = 1 / IQ
Example: If USD/JPY (direct) moves from 100 to 105, it means it now takes 105 yen to buy 1 U.S. dollar, i.e., the yen has weakened versus the dollar. Explore More Resources

Market conventions and common examples
* U.S. dollar (USD): Because USD is the most traded currency, many market quotes use the dollar as the base or reference. A direct quote in the U.S. might be written as $1.17 CAD/US$ (meaning $1.17 Canadian per US$1).
* British pound (GBP): Historically quoted against other currencies as pounds per unit (e.g., $1.45 per Β£1), reflecting legacy convention.
* Euro (EUR): The euro is typically quoted as the base currency (quotes show the number of dollars, pounds, francs, or yen per €1).
Alternatives and related quotes
* Indirect quote: Shows how much foreign currency one unit of domestic currency can buy (the reciprocal of a direct quote).
* Cross rates: Exchange between two non-domestic currencies derived from their rates versus a common currency. Example: if USD/GBP = 0.75 and USD/JPY = 110, then GBP/JPY β‰ˆ 110 / 0.75 = 146.67.
* Bid and ask: The bid is the price buyers will pay; the ask is the price sellers will accept. Both can be quoted in direct or indirect terms.
* Forward rates: Agreed exchange rates for transactions set today but executed on a future date; can be given as direct quotes for that future date.
Quick FAQs
* How is a direct quote different from an indirect quote?
A direct quote expresses domestic currency per unit of foreign currency; an indirect quote expresses foreign currency per unit of domestic currency.
* Why use direct quotes?
They simplify understanding the domestic cost of purchasing foreign currency and align with market or regional conventions. Explore More Resources

  * How do you convert a direct quote into an indirect quote?

Take the reciprocal. Example: a direct quote of $1.10/€ β†’ indirect = 1 / 1.10 β‰ˆ €0.909/$1.
Bottom line A direct quote shows how much domestic currency is needed to buy one unit of foreign currency. It provides a straightforward way to compare and transact in foreign exchange, and conventions (USD, GBP, EUR) determine which currency is typically used as the base in market quotes. Explore More Resources