When two parties agree to trade currencies, securities, or other financial instruments, they create an obligation: one side delivers cash, the other delivers the asset. Settlement risk emerges in the gap between these two legs of the transaction. If one counterparty fulfills its obligation but the other defaults before reciprocating, the performing party loses both the asset it delivered and the payment it expected to receive.
This risk is not theoretical. Banks, asset managers, hedge funds, and corporations encounter settlement exposure daily, especially in foreign exchange markets where trillions of dollars change hands across borders and time zones. Understanding how settlement risk arises, how it differs from related concepts like credit risk, and which tools exist to contain it has become essential for anyone involved in cross-border finance.
Settlement risk is the danger that one party in a financial transaction will deliver cash or securities as agreed, but the counterparty will fail to deliver its side of the bargain. The risk crystallizes during the settlement window—the period between when the first leg of a trade is executed and when the second leg completes.
Trades do not settle instantaneously. A typical FX spot transaction agreed on Monday might settle on Wednesday (T+2). During those two days, market prices move, and counterparty credit conditions can deteriorate. But the true settlement risk window is narrower and...