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How are different currency bids compared

Exchange rate pegged to the currency markets?

         

chrisk999

3:36 pm on Feb 9, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



If two ads have an identical CTR but one is bidding in GB pounds and the other is bidding in US dollars, the currency conversion method becomes important.

Does Google use a daily conversion rate, pegged to the currency markets, or is it just fixed at £0.60 = $1 = CHF1.3 = EUR0.8 (for example)?

I'm getting the feeling it's just fixed at a constant value (perhaps updated occassionally if there's a big shift in the markets), but would be good to get some clarification from Google if possible?

AdWordsAdvisor

4:56 pm on Feb 9, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



If two ads have an identical CTR but one is bidding in GB pounds and the other is bidding in US dollars, the currency conversion method becomes important...

I'm getting the feeling it's just fixed at a constant value...but would be good to get some clarification from Google if possible?

Chrisk999, do I detect a hint? ;)

This has come up a couple of times in the recent past, and it's not really an area in which I have personal experience - so I am just going to post the same quote that I've used in past threads, made by a more informed Googler than myself:

Google converts the bid value to the US Dollar and than determines the ad rank.

Before entering the auction, the CPC's are converted into what we call micro-currency. Basically, we calculate currency down to 6 decimal points. Highly exact exchange rates are retrieved daily.

The base currency is the US dollar, or more specifically, one hundred-thousandth of a US dollar, so even dollars are converted, really.

Because this is so granular a calculation, there is no advantage to bidding in one currency rather than another.

AWA

chrisk999

6:09 pm on Feb 9, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Groovy thanks AWA! (sorry I missed that previous comment)

whats up skip

10:21 pm on Feb 9, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



"there is no advantage to bidding in one currency rather than another. "

This is the case where the bidding is not near the minimum amount of US$0.05, but if it is then there is a major problem.

The minimum I can bid in Australian dollars is A$0.09 or about US$0.0693, thus we are paying 38% more than we would if we had a US dollars account.

Ok, for most campaigns you don't bid this minimum amount, but it is a real problem if you want to.

I have asked Google about this and the only option I have been given is to close my Australian dollars account with all its history and open a US dollars account.

This is a major pain and not very good customer service.

Sujan

11:22 pm on Feb 9, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Hmm, just a thought:
Which ad will be shown if one bids A$0.09 and the other US$0.05? Both are the minimum bids, but A$0.09 is more...

whats up skip

12:06 am on Feb 10, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



The A$0.09 ad shows first, which is fine if you are competing, but for many terms our ad would be the only one.

edit_g

10:17 am on Feb 10, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



If you play around with the API for any amount of time you'll see parts of how the currency units are broken down - it's a pretty clever way of doing it.