Quote from tradestrong:
It looks like what they are doing is giving you a "speculative" APY. It's based on if the currency appreciates (proabably at the same rate it's recently been appreciating against the dollar).
So, they probably offset the principal if the currency depreciates against the dollar.
In other words, what it sounds lke to me is that they give you a "definite" interest rate and speculate on the appreciation. As an example (I'm throwing numbers out there), for the Iceland Krona, you might get 3% interest and then a speculative 10% appreciation. If the Krona doesn't appreciate at all, you get the 3%. If it depreciates let's say 10% against the dollar, you get a 3% interest rate and then a 10% loss of the principal, so you'll lose like just under 7% in that case.
That's what it sounds like to me how it works.
I don't think so. The Iceland Central Bank rate is 13.75. It's most likely that you get a good rate of return because their rates are high. If you look at the New Zealand CD they offer, it's at NZ's bank rate.
It's not speculative. But if the dollar did appreciate, you'd obviously lose some. But as I say, I'm hedged for that scenario.
