NZD/CHF Interest Rate Differential
The current policy-rate gap between New Zealand Dollar and Swiss Franc, and which side of NZD/CHF earns the carry. Updated daily · as of June 18, 2026.
New Zealand Dollar carries the higher policy rate, so going long NZD/CHF earns positive carry (swap); the opposite side pays it.
This is the current gap. The market trades the expected differential, which can move NZD/CHF before any rate change lands.
Go deeper
All interest rate differentials
The full matrix and carry calculator for every major.
The Carry Trade
How the differential becomes a daily swap, and why it crashes.
New Zealand Dollar rate decision
The schedule and results that move the NZD leg.
Swiss Franc rate decision
The schedule and results that move the CHF leg.
NZD/CHF carry — frequently asked
What is the NZD/CHF interest rate differential?
The NZD/CHF interest rate differential is currently +2.25 pp — the New Zealand Dollar policy rate (2.25%) minus the Swiss Franc policy rate (0.00%). New Zealand Dollar carries the higher rate, so it tends to attract demand.
Does long NZD/CHF earn or pay swap (carry)?
Going long NZD/CHF earns positive carry, paid as the daily swap (rollover), because that side holds the higher-yielding currency (New Zealand Dollar). The opposite side pays the swap. Carry is simply the interest-rate differential turned into a daily cash flow.
Why does the expected NZD/CHF differential matter more than today's?
Markets price the future, not the present. NZD/CHF can move on a widening or narrowing expected differential before any actual rate change, as new data and central-bank guidance shift the expected paths of the New Zealand Dollar and Swiss Franc central banks. Today's gap is largely already priced in.
Does the higher-yielding side of NZD/CHF always go up?
No. The rate differential is gravity, not a guarantee. It dominates in calm, risk-on conditions, but in a risk-off shock capital rushes to safe havens regardless of yield, and crowded carry positions can unwind violently.