Banks earn on FX through a mechanism most businesses never see on their statement. Here’s exactly how it works, what it costs exporters doing USD 25k+ per month, and how to benchmark it.
There’s No Line Item. That’s the Point.
If your bank charged you a flat fee every time they converted your USD to INR, you’d notice it immediately. You’d probably negotiate it. You might even switch providers.
Banks don’t do that. They don’t need to.
Instead, they apply a rate. The rate they show you is not the real market rate. It’s the market rate, plus a margin they’ve decided to earn. The difference is invisible unless you’re actively
looking for it — and because no regulatory requirement forces banks to disclose this margin as a named fee, most businesses never look.
This is not a conspiracy. It’s how FX has worked for decades in traditional banking. But it’s worth understanding precisely, because for exporters with meaningful USD collections, it’s one of the larger silent costs in their P&L.
How the FX Market Actually Works
There is a live, global interbank FX market operating 24 hours a day. At any given moment, USD/INR has a rate — let’s call it the mid-market rate. This is what you see on Google, Bloomberg, Reuters, or XE.com. Banks trade with each other at or very close to this rate.
When you, as an exporter, receive USD and ask your bank to convert it to INR, you don’t get the mid-market rate. You get a rate the bank sets — and that rate is less favorable to you than the market rate. The difference between what the bank pays in the interbank market and what they give you is the bank’s margin on the transaction. It’s called the FX spread.
The bank earns this margin without taking on risk (they immediately hedge or pass through in the interbank market). It’s pure service revenue, earned on every conversion, disclosed to nobody.
What Does This Look Like in Practice?
Say the USD/INR interbank rate is 93.50 at the time your payment is converted.
Your bank applies a 1.5% spread. They quote you 92.0975 instead.
On USD 25,000, the difference is:
- At 93.50: you receive INR 23,37,500
- At 93.0975: you receive INR 23,02,437
- Difference: INR 35,062 — or approximately USD 375 — lost silently
That number doesn’t appear anywhere on your bank statement. Your statement says your USD was converted at 82.25. It doesn’t say the market was at 83.50. It doesn’t say the difference was INR 31,250. It simply shows you the INR credit, and you have no immediate way to know whether that rate was fair.
How Spread Varies by Relationship and Volume
FX spread is not fixed. It varies based on your relationship with the bank, your transaction volume, whether you’ve negotiated a rate, and increasingly, what kind of infrastructure you’re using.
| Client Type | Typical FX Spread | On USD 25k/Month | Annual Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Large corporate (negotiated) | 0.2%–0.5% | USD 50–125 | USD 600–1,500 |
| Mid-market exporter | 0.8%–1.5% | USD 200–375 | USD 2,400–4,500 |
| SME exporter (standard) | 1.5%–2.5% | USD 375–625 | USD 4,500–7,500 |
| No rate negotiation | 2.0%–3.0%+ | USD 500–750+ | USD 6,000–9,000+ |
Most Indian exporters in the USD 25k–200k/month range are operating at SME or mid-market spreads. They’ve never negotiated because they didn’t realize there was anything to negotiate, or because they assumed the bank’s rate was standard.
It’s not. Everything in FX is negotiable at sufficient volume.
Why This Is Harder to See Than Any Other Cost
Consider how your other business costs work. Your rent is on a lease. Your payroll is itemized. Your software subscriptions have invoices. Your logistics vendor sends you a rate card. Every cost has a document.
FX spread has none of that. The only record is the conversion rate on your statement. And because currency rates fluctuate daily, any single data point looks reasonable in isolation. It’s only when you track your actual realized rate versus the market rate, systematically, over time, that the pattern becomes visible.
This is why we consistently see finance teams at growing exporter businesses describe FX as a cost they always felt was probably too high — but never had the data to act on.
Traditional Bank FX vs Modern FX Infrastructure
| Traditional Bank FX | Modern FX Infrastructure | |
|---|---|---|
| Rate transparency | Rate disclosed at conversion only | Live rate shown before conversion |
| Spread disclosure | Not disclosed, not itemized | Spread stated explicitly |
| Benchmarking | Not possible without manual work | Built-in market rate comparison |
| Timing control | Bank decides conversion timing | Exporter controls conversion timing |
| Treasury visibility | INR received, no attribution | Full FX attribution per transaction |
| Volume advantage | Only for large corporates | Available at SME scale |
What Exporters Should Do
The first step is measurement. You cannot optimize what you do not measure. For every USD conversion, record:
- The date of conversion
- The USD amount converted
- The rate your bank applied
- The mid-market rate on that date (from any public source)
- The spread in percentage terms
Do this for three months. The data will tell you exactly how much you’re paying in FX margin annually. For most SME exporters, it’s a number large enough to justify a change.
The second step is choosing infrastructure that shows you the rate before conversion, not after. When you can see what you’re getting before you commit to it, you make better decisions. You can time conversions. You can benchmark. You can negotiate.
The third step — for businesses at sufficient volume — is having a conversation with your bank about FX terms. Volume is leverage. Most exporters don’t realize they have it.
The Strategic Framing
FX is a revenue function, not an accounting function. The margin your bank earns on every conversion is margin that would otherwise be yours. It’s not a cost of doing business in the way that logistics is a cost. It’s the difference between the value your business created and the value your business actually captured.
For a business doing USD 300,000 in annual collections, optimizing FX by even 1% is USD 3,000 in additional realized revenue — with no new clients, no new product, and no new overhead. That’s the business case for treating FX transparency as a priority.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do banks make money on FX transactions?
Banks earn through the FX spread — the difference between the live interbank market rate and the rate they quote customers. This margin is not disclosed as a fee. It reduces the INR received without appearing as a line item on the statement.
What is FX spread for Indian exporters?
For Indian SME exporters, FX spread typically ranges from 1.5% to 2.5% with standard banking relationships. Large corporates may negotiate this down to 0.2%–0.5%. The spread is applied at the point of USD to INR conversion.
Is FX margin the same as forex charges?
Not exactly. Forex charges are explicit fees (like SWIFT charges or transfer fees). FX margin is implicit — it’s built into the conversion rate rather than charged separately. Both reduce your realized revenue, but FX margin is harder to see.
Can exporters negotiate FX rates with banks?
Yes. FX rates are negotiable, particularly at higher transaction volumes. Most SME exporters have never negotiated because they weren’t aware the spread was variable. Building a data case — showing your volume, frequency, and current realized rate — strengthens any negotiation.
How can I find out what FX spread my bank is charging?
Compare the rate applied on your bank statement with the mid-market rate on the same date (available on any public FX data source). The percentage difference is your spread. Do this consistently for three months to build an accurate picture.
Does using local collection accounts reduce FX costs?
Local collection accounts primarily reduce SWIFT intermediary deductions. FX spread at conversion depends on the pricing infrastructure of your payment provider. Providers using live interbank pricing with transparent spread disclosure give you better visibility and typically better effective rates than traditional banking.
What is the mid-market rate?
The mid-market rate is the midpoint between the buy and sell prices in the interbank FX market — the rate banks use when trading with each other. It’s the most accurate reflection of currency value at any given moment. Consumer and business rates are always less favorable than the mid-market rate.

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