Using Rate Types: Examples
There are four seeded conversion rate types in Oracle Fusion applications:- Spot
- Corporate
- User
- Fixed
Rate Type | Usage |
---|---|
Spot | For currencies with fluctuating conversion rates or when exact currency conversion is needed. |
Corporate | For establishment of a standard rate across your organization for a stable currency. |
User | For infrequent entries where your daily rates for the entered foreign currency are not set up. |
Fixed | For rates where the conversion is constant between two currencies. |
If you have infrequent foreign currency transactions, the user rate type can simplify your currency maintenance while providing an accurate conversion rate on the date of the transaction.
Scenario
You are the general ledger accountant for In Fusion America Inc. You are entering a journal entry to capture three transactions that were transacted in three different foreign currencies:- Canadian dollar (CAD): A very stable currency
- Mexican Peso (MXP): A fluctuating currency
- Hong Kong dollar (HKD): An infrequently used currency
Currency Selected | Rate Type Selected | Reason |
---|---|---|
CAD | Corporate | Entered a periodic type of transaction. Your company has established a daily rate to use for the entire month across divisions for all transactions in CAD. CAD is a stable currency that only fluctuations slightly over the month. |
MXP | Spot | Entered a periodic type of transaction. Your company enters daily rates each day for MXP because this currency is unstable and fluctuates. |
HKD | User | Entered a one time transaction. Your company does not maintain daily rates in HKD. |
Note
Your company does not currently use the Fixed rate type. From January 1, 1999, the
conversion rate of the French franc (FRF) against the euro currency
(EUR) was set at a fixed rate of 1 EUR to 6.55957 FRF. Your French
operations were started in 2007, so you maintain all your French business
records in the EUR.