currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

46
1 Multinational Financial Management Alan Shapiro 7 th Edition J.Wiley & Sons Power Points by Joseph F. Greco, Ph.D. California State University, Fullerton

Transcript of currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

Page 1: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

1

Multinational Financial Management Alan Shapiro

7th Edition J.Wiley & SonsPower Points byJoseph F. Greco, Ph.D.California State University, Fullerton

Page 2: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

2

CHAPTER 10

MEASURING ACCOUNTING EXPOSURE

Page 3: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

3

CHAPTER OVERVIEW

I. ALTERNATIVE MEASURES OF FOREIGN EXCHANGE EXPOSURE

II.ALTERNATIVE CURRENCY TRANSLATION METHODS

III. STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL

ACCOUNTING STANDARDS NO.52

Page 4: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

4

CHAPTER OVERVIEW (con’t)

IV. TRANSACTION EXPOSURE

V. DESIGNING A HEDGING STRATEGY

VI. MANAGING TRANSLATION EXPOSURE

VII. MANAGING TRANSACTION EXPOSURE

Page 5: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

5

PART I. ALTERNATIVE MEASURES OF FOREIGN EXCHANGE EXPOSURE

I. ALTERNATIVE MEASURES OF FOREIGN EXCHANGE EXPOSUREA. Three Types of Exposure

1. Accounting Exposure:when reporting and

consolidating financial statements requires

conversion from foreign to local currency.

Page 6: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

6

ALTERNATIVE MEASURES OF FOREIGN EXCHANGE EXPOSURE

2. Transaction Exposure:

occurs from changes in the value of foreign currency contracts as a result of exchange rate changes.

Page 7: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

7

ALTERNATIVE MEASURES OF FOREIGN EXCHANGE EXPOSURE

3. Operating Exposurearises because exchange ratechanges may alter the value

of future revenues and costs.

Page 8: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

8

ALTERNATIVE MEASURES OF FOREIGN EXCHANGE EXPOSURE

Economic Exposure

= Transaction + Operating Exposures

Page 9: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

9

PART II. ALTERNATIVE CURRENCY TRANSLATION METHODS

I. FOUR METHODS OF TRANSLATIONA. Current/Noncurrent Method

1. Current accounts use current exchange rate for conversion.

2. Income statement accounts use average exchange rate for the period.

Page 10: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

10

ALTERNATIVE CURRENCY TRANSLATION METHODS

B. Monetary/Nonmonetary Method1. Monetary accounts use

current rate2. Pertains to

- cash- accounts receivable- accounts payable- long term debt

Page 11: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

11

ALTERNATIVE CURRENCY TRANSLATION METHODS

3. Nonmonetary accounts- use historical rates- Pertains to

inventoryfixed assetslong term investments

4. Income statement accounts - use average exchange rate for the period.

Page 12: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

12

ALTERNATIVE CURRENCY TRANSLATION METHODS

C. Temporal Method1. Similar to

monetary/nonmonetarymethod.

2. Uses current method for inventory.

Page 13: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

13

ALTERNATIVE CURRENCY TRANSLATION METHODS

D. Current Rate Method

all statements use current exchange rate for

conversions.

Page 14: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

14

PART III. STATEMENT OF INANCIAL ACCOUNTING STANDARDS NO. 52

I. FASB NO. 52A. Dissatisfaction with FASB No. 8

true profitability often disguised by

exchange rate volatility.B. Balance sheet translation uses

current rate method.

Page 15: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

15

STATEMENT OF INANCIAL ACCOUNTING STANDARDS NO. 52

C. Income statement uses1. Weighted average rate

during period or

2. The rate in effect when revenue and expenses

incurred.

Page 16: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

16

STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING STANDARDS NO. 52

D. Translation Gains or Losses

1. Recorded in separate equity

account on balance sheet.

2. Known as cumulative

translation adjustment

account.

Page 17: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

17

STATEMENT OF INANCIAL ACCOUNTING STANDARDS NO. 52E. New Distinction under FASB No.

52:functional v. reporting currency1. Functional currency

for foreign subsidiary = the currency used in the

primary economic environment in which it operates.

Page 18: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

18

STATEMENT OF INANCIAL ACCOUNTING STANDARDS NO. 52

2. Reporting currency the currency the parent firm

uses to prepare its financial statements.

Page 19: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

19

STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING STANDARDS NO. 52

3. If foreign subsidiary’ operations are direct extension of parent firm

e.g. Hong Kong assembly plant which

sells all its products in the U.S. market.

Page 20: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

20

PART IV. TRANSACTION EXPOSURE

I. WHEN DOES IT OCCUR?A. From the time of agreement to time of

payment.

B. Arises from possibility of exchange rate

gains and losses from the transaction.

Page 21: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

21

TRANSACTION EXPOSUREII. MEASUREMENT

A. Currency by currencyB. Equals the difference between

1. The contractually-fixed invoice amount in a specific currency2. The final payment amount denominated in current

exchange rate for the specific currency.

Page 22: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

22

PART V. DESIGNING A HEDGING STRATEGY

III. DESIGNING A HEDGING STRATEGYA. Strategies

a function of management’sobjectives

B. Hedging’s basic objective:reduce/eliminate volatility ofearnings as a result of

exchangerate changes.

Page 23: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

23

DESIGNING A HEDGING STRATEGY

C. Hedging exchange rate risk1. Costs money2. Should be evaluated as any

otherpurchase of insurance.

3. Taking advantage of taxasymmetries lowers hedging

costs.

Page 24: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

24

DESIGNING A HEDGING STRATEGY

D. Centralization v. Decentralization1. Important aspects:

a. Degree of centralizationb. Responsibility for developingc. Implementing the hedging

strategy.2. Maximum benefits accrue from

centralizing policy-making, formulation, and

implementation.

Page 25: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

25

PART VI. MANAGING TRANSLATION EXPOSUREI. MANAGING TRANSLATION EXPOSURE

A. 3 Available Methods1. Adjusting fund flows

altering either the amounts or the currencies of the planned cash flows of the parent or its subsidiaries to reduce the

firm’s local currency accounting exposure.

Page 26: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

26

MANAGING TRANSLATION EXPOSURE

2. Forward contracts

reducing a firm’s translation exposure by creating an offsetting asset or liability in the

foreign currency.

Page 27: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

27

MANAGING TRANSLATION EXPOSURE3. Exposure netting

a. offsetting exposures in one currency with exposures

in the same or another currency

b. gains and losses on the two currency positions

will offset each other.

Page 28: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

28

MANAGING TRANSLATION EXPOSURE

B. Basic hedging strategy for reducing translation exposure:

1. increasing hard-currency(likely to appreciate) assets

2. decreasing soft-currency(likely to depreciate) assets

3. decreasing hard-currency liabilities

Page 29: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

29

MANAGING TRANSLATION EXPOSURE

4. increasing soft-currency liabilities

i.e. reduce the level of cash, tighten credit terms to decrease accounts receivable, increase LC borrowing, delay accounts payable, and sell the weak currency forward.

Page 30: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

30

PART VII. MANAGING TRANSACTION EXPOSURE

I. METHODS OF HEDGINGA. Forward market hedgeB. Money market hedgeC. Risk shiftingD. Pricing decisionE. Exposure nettingF. Currency risk sharingG. Currency collarsH. Cross-hedging I. Foreign currency options

Page 31: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

31

MANAGING TRANSACTION EXPOSURE

Central idea: HedgingHedging a particular currency

exposure means establishing an offsetting currency position

Whatever is lost or gained on the original currency exposure is exactly offset by a corresponding foreign exchange gain or loss on the currency hedge

Page 32: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

32

MANAGING TRANSACTION EXPOSUREManaging transaction exposure:A transaction exposure arises

whenever a company is committed to a foreign currency-denominated transaction.

Protective measures include using: forward contracts, price adjustment clauses, currency options, and HC invoicing.

Page 33: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

33

MANAGING TRANSACTION EXPOSURE

A. FORWARD MARKET HEDGE1. consists of offsetting

a. a receivable or payable in a foreign currencyb. using a forward contract:- to sell or buy that currency- at a set delivery date- which coincides with receipt of the foreign currency.

Page 34: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

34

MANAGING TRANSACTION EXPOSURE

2. True Cost of Hedging:a. The opportunity cost depends

uponfuture spot rate at settlement

b. Shown as

f1 - e1

e0where f1 = forward rate

e0 = spot rate e1 = future spot rate

Page 35: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

35

MANAGING TRANSACTION EXPOSURE

B. MONEY MARKET HEDGE 1. Definition:

simultaneous borrowing and lending activities in

two different currencies to lock in the dollar value of a future foreign currency cash flow

Page 36: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

36

MANAGING TRANSACTION EXPOSURE

C. RISK SHIFTING1. home currency invoicing2. zero sum game3. common in global business

4. firm will invoice exports in strong currency, import in weak

currency5. Drawback:

it is not possible with informed customers or suppliers.

Page 37: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

37

MANAGING TRANSACTION EXPOSURE

D. PRICING DECISIONS1. general roles: on credit sales

connect foreign price to home price using forward rate, but not spot rate. 2. if the dollar price is high/low enough

the exporter/importer should follow through with the sale.

Page 38: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

38

MANAGING TRANSACTION EXPOSURE

E. EXPOSURE NETTING1. Protection can be gained by

selecting currencies that minimize exposure2. Netting: MNC chooses currencies that are not perfectly positively correlated.3. Exposure in one currency can be offset by the exposure in another.

Page 39: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

39

MANAGING TRANSACTION EXPOSUREF. CURRENCY RISK SHARING

1. Developing a customized hedge contract

2. The contract typically takes the form of a Price Adjustment Clause, whereby a base price is adjusted to reflect certain

exchange rate changes.

Page 40: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

40

MANAGING TRANSACTION EXPOSUREF. CURRENCY RISK SHARING (con’t)

3. Parties would share the currency risk beyond a

neutral zone of exchange rate changes.

4. The neutral zone represents the currency range in which risk is not shared.

Page 41: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

41

MANAGING TRANSACTION EXPOSUREG. CURRENCY COLLARS

1. Contract bought to protect against currency moves outside the neutral zone.

2. Firm would convert its foreign currency denominated

receivable at the zone forward rate.

Page 42: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

42

MANAGING TRANSACTION EXPOSURE

H. CROSS-HEDGING1. Often forward contracts not available in a certain currency.2. Solution: a cross-hedge - a forward contract in a related currency.3. Correlation between 2 currencies is critical to success of this hedge.

Page 43: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

43

MANAGING TRANSACTION EXPOSURE

I. Foreign Currency OptionsWhen transaction is uncertain, currency options are a good hedging tool in situations in which the quantity of foreign exchange to be received or paid out is uncertain.

Page 44: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

44

MANAGING TRANSACTION EXPOSURE

I. Foreign currency options

1. A call option

is valuable when a firm has offered to buy a foreign asset at a fixed foreign currency price but is uncertain whether its bid will be accepted.

Page 45: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

45

MANAGING TRANSACTION EXPOSURE

2. The firm can lock in a maximum

dollar price for its tender offer,

while limiting its downside

risk to the call premium in the

event its bid is rejected.

Page 46: currency risk sharing n netting n others.....ppt

46

MANAGING TRANSACTION EXPOSURE

3. A put option

allows the company to insure its

profit margin against adverse

movements in the foreign

currency while guaranteeing

fixed prices to foreign customer.