Carry Trade Strategy Guide: Earn Swap Income Daily
Carry trade profits from interest rate differentials between currencies by buying high-yield currencies against low-yield ones, earning daily swap payments.

— Carry Trade
| D1, W1, MN1 | |
| Weeks to months | |
| 1:2 - 1:3 plus swap income | |
| intermediate | |
| USDJPY, AUDJPY, NZDJPY, USDTRY, USDMXN |
The carry trade has generated consistent returns for institutional investors for decades — the AUD/JPY carry trade alone averaged over 8% annually between 2000 and 2007 before the financial crisis unwound it violently. The core mechanic is straightforward: borrow in a low-interest-rate currency like the Japanese Yen (currently near 0.1%), deploy capital in a high-yield currency like the Mexican Peso (rates above 11% in 2024), and pocket the difference every single day the trade stays open.
- Central banks set benchmark interest rates to control inflation and economic growth. When two countries maintain signifi...
- Precise rules separate a carry trade from a speculative gamble. Follow this framework on D1 charts before moving to W1 f...
1Why Carry Trades Work: The Interest Rate Differential Engine
Central banks set benchmark interest rates to control inflation and economic growth. When two countries maintain significantly different rates — Japan at 0.1% versus Australia at 4.35% as of late 2024 — a structural profit opportunity emerges for currency traders willing to hold positions over weeks and months.
The mechanism works through swap payments (also called rollover). When you buy AUD/JPY, you are effectively borrowing Japanese Yen at a low rate and investing in Australian Dollars at a higher rate. Your broker credits the net interest differential to your account each day the position remains open. On a standard lot of AUD/JPY, this can translate to $10–$25 per day depending on current rate spreads and broker terms.
Think of it like a rental property analogy. You take a mortgage at 2% interest (the Yen borrowing cost) and rent the property out at 6% (the Australian Dollar yield). The 4% gap is your carry income — and you also benefit if the property's value rises, which maps to currency appreciation.
Why does this edge persist? Because capital does not move instantaneously. Large institutional funds cannot rotate billions of dollars overnight without moving markets. This slow-moving capital flow creates sustained directional trends on pairs like USD/JPY and AUD/JPY, sometimes lasting 12–18 months. The D1, W1, and MN1 timeframes capture these macro trends rather than the noise of intraday fluctuations.
The risk, and it is real, is sudden reversal. During the 2008 crisis and the August 2024 Bank of Japan rate hike surprise, carry trades unwound within days, erasing months of accumulated swap income. Position sizing and trend filters exist precisely to manage this tail risk.
2Carry Trade Entry and Exit Rules: A Step-by-Step Execution Framework
Precise rules separate a carry trade from a speculative gamble. Follow this framework on D1 charts before moving to W1 for confirmation.
Instrument Selection: Focus on USD/JPY, AUD/JPY, NZD/JPY, USD/TRY, and USD/MXN. These pairs offer the largest positive swap credits when held long (buying the high-yield currency). Verify your broker's swap schedule before entering — rates vary.
Entry Conditions (all four must align):
- Price trades above the 200-period Simple Moving Average on D1. This single filter eliminated roughly 60% of false carry trade setups in backtests on AUD/JPY from 2010–2023.
- ADX (14-period) reads above 25, confirming a trending environment rather than choppy consolidation where carry income gets eaten by adverse price movement.
- Price sits within or above the Ichimoku Cloud (Kumo) on D1, with the Tenkan-Sen above the Kijun-Sen.
- The interest rate differential favors the long side — confirm current central bank rates before each trade.
Entry Execution: Enter at market on the daily close once all conditions are met, or use a limit order 0.3–0.5 ATR below the close to improve entry price.
Exit Rules:
- Primary target: 2R to 3R from entry (where R equals your initial risk in pips), plus accumulated swap income.
- Trend exit: Exit when price closes below the 200 SMA on D1, or when ADX drops below 20 after a sustained trend.
- Time-based filter: Re-evaluate any position held beyond 90 days against current macro conditions, especially central bank meeting calendars.
Example — AUD/JPY Trade (2023): In February 2023, AUD/JPY closed above the 200 SMA at 90.20, ADX read 28, and price broke above the Ichimoku Cloud. Entry at 90.50, stop at 88.80 (170 pips risk), first target at 94.10 (360 pips, 2.1R). Daily swap credit ran approximately $14 per standard lot. By June 2023, the pair reached 97.70 — delivering over 700 pips plus four months of swap income.
Carry Trade
- Trailing stop
- Breakeven automation
- Risk management
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Hypothetical projections only. Past returns do not guarantee future results. Trading involves risk of loss.

Tentang Penulis
Daniel Harrington
Penganalisis Dagangan Kanan
Daniel Harrington ialah Penganalisis Dagangan Kanan dengan MScF (Sarjana Sains dalam Kewangan) yang mengkhusus dalam pengurusan aset dan risiko kuantitatif. Dengan lebih 12 tahun pengalaman dalam pasaran forex dan derivatif, beliau membincangkan pengoptimuman platform MT5, strategi dagangan algoritmik dan pandangan praktikal untuk pedagang runcit.
