confused over 2008 exam AM #7 question

Hello. The below text is provided on a short Forward contract which expires today. The explanation states that short bears credit risk here because the spot is at 17.5 verses the 15 forward rate. I was hoping someone could explain given I would think at 17.5-15=2.5 the value to long would be 2.5 and therefore the long would bear the credit risk and not RR the short. Any help is appreciated.

Forward:

• short a two-year forward currency contract on Japanese yen (JPY) denominated in

ZAR at 15.00 JPY/ZAR forward rate;

• this forward contract expires today;

• exchange rate was 14.50 JPY/ZAR when RR entered the contract;

• the spot (current) rate is now 17.50 JPY/ZAR;

• compound annual interest rates for the two-year period: 1 percent in JPY and 10

percent in ZAR.

Explanation:

Based on the comparison between the forward rate 15.00

JPY/ZAR and the spot rate 17.50 JPY/ZAR, the short-yen

counterparty (RR) receives the payment, so RR bears the

credit risk.

Fairly simple. RR is short the Yen and the Yen depreciated.

Understood. So rather its best to convert with yen in base: .0571 (short forward) - .066 (spot) = (.0089) value to the long. With a negative value to the long, the short bears the credit risk. Looking at it this way is more clear to me. Thanks