Corporate Fin Mgt NDLM.PDF

(Nora) #1

Separate group exercises will be given regarding using of some of these techniques.



  1. Covering a Consolidation Exposure


The magnitude of exposure depends on the method of translation used by the parent
company.


Suppose an American company wants to borrow Deutschmarks at a variable rate. The
company is well placed on the American market. It borrows US$ 1 million on the
American market at a fixed rate and enters into a swap deal with its bank. On the date of
the contract, there is an exchange of the principal: the American company pays to its
bank 1 million dollars and receives 1.4 million Deutschmarks, the spot rate being DM
1.4/US$, during the contract period, the company will pay a variable rate on the
Deutschmarks while the bank will pay it a fixed rate on dollars. There will also be a re-
exchange of the principal on the maturity date.


American Company $ 1m Bank


DM 1.4 m

American Company Variable rate Bank

Fixed rate

American Company DM 1.4 m Bank

$ 1m

Currency swaps are comparable to a forward exchange transaction with a difference that
the differential of rates is calculated periodically instead of being settled just once at the
end of the contract; this feature renders the swaps more efficient and more flexible than
covering in the forward market for long periods.



  1. Interest Rate Risk


All banks and firms, domestic or multinational are sensitive to interest rate movements.
The interest rate risk results from a mismatch of maturity of assets and liabilities
respectively.


Financial markets have developed instruments, options and futures, on interest to cover
these risks. Likewise, banks have also evolved/devised certain mechanisms in this
regard.


Interest rate risk concerns the following:

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