Forex considerations for UAE expats: Why currency risk needs attention


Most expats in the UAE do not think of themselves as taking currency risk. They think about investments, property prices or interest rates. Currency tends to sit quietly in the background.

But for many expatriates, it is one of the largest hidden risks in their financial life.

If you earn in dirhams, hold savings in dollars and plan to retire in pounds or euros, you are already exposed. Currency exposure simply means that the money you have today is not in the same currency as the money you will eventually need.

For someone who has always lived and worked in one country, this rarely becomes an issue. Income, spending and long-term goals are all in the same currency. Expat life is different. A British professional in Dubai might still own property in the UK, intend to fund education overseas and eventually retire somewhere entirely different. Income, assets and goals start to drift apart in currency terms.

What makes currency risk particularly uncomfortable is that, unlike investment risk, there is no built-in reward for taking it.

When we invest in equities, we accept volatility because we expect a higher long-term return. Investors demand compensation for uncertainty. The same logic applies to certain types of bonds. There is a risk premium.

Currencies do not work that way. Exchange rates move relative to one another. If one strengthens, another weakens. There is no structural long-term uplift from holding the “wrong” currency for your future plans. If you are saving in US dollars but intend to buy a property in the UK, and the dollar weakens, that property simply becomes more expensive in dollar terms. Even if you held the cash safely, the purchasing power has shifted.