Currency conversion: Calculator vs. PayPal

I was about to make a payment through PayPal to a seller in Britain, when it occurred to me to check the currency conversion. According to PayPal:

PayPal's Exchange Rate as of Oct. 31, 2006:
1 U.S. Dollar = 0.513727 Pounds Sterling

which resulted in £6.50 = $12.66.

I opened Calculator, updated the currency exchange rates (it said Pound Sterling was updated), entered £6.50, and converted to dollars, resulting in $12.34. IOW, according to Calculator, 1 U.S. Dollar = 0.526676 Pounds Sterling.

This is a difference of 2.5%, curiously nearly the same as PayPal's payment fee (2.9%).

According to Calculator's Help, "Calculator only supports currencies whose exchange rates are posted by the International Monetary Fund." So where, exactly, does Calculator get its exchange rates?

I did a Google search, which found:

1) According to Google:
1 U.S. dollar = 0.527370531 British pounds

2) According to the " Universal Currency Converter":
1.00 USD = 0.526063 GBP

3) According to Yahoo:
1.00 USD = 0.5258 GBP

So it looks like Calculator is substantially in agreement with the world in general.

So where is PayPal getting their exchange rates -- which appear (big surprise) to profit PayPal?

PowerBook G4 17" 1.5GHz Mac OS X (10.4.8) 1GB RAM, 80GB HD, DVD-RAM SuperDrive

Posted on Oct 31, 2006 7:28 AM

Reply
3 replies

Oct 31, 2006 7:45 AM in response to HandyMac

I think if you plow through the PayPal site, you will find that they do indeed add exactly a 2.5% "PayPal Fee" onto any foreign exchange conversion.

here it is, under "Fees" at the PayPal web site:

"* If your transaction involves a currency conversion, it will be completed at a retail foreign exchange rate determined by PayPal, which is adjusted regularly based on market conditions. This exchange rate includes a 2.5% spread above the wholesale exchange rate at which PayPal obtains foreign currency, and the spread is retained by PayPal. The specific exchange rate that applies to your multiple currency transaction will be displayed at the time of the transaction."

Oct 31, 2006 8:11 AM in response to Michael Black

Thanks, that explains it. I had seen that notice before, but forgotten it. Just another of PayPal's many charms: a 5+% cut on this transaction.

I've also noticed that PayPal always wants to go directly to my bank account, rather than let me pay with credit card; that way, of course, they make an extra ~2%. There's no way to change the default, so I do it manually every time.

Well, I guess we can always go to the competition...

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Currency conversion: Calculator vs. PayPal

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