BUSF_A01.qxd

(Darren Dugan) #1

Chapter 15 • International aspects of business finance


lInterest rate parity =where nominal interest rates are different between coun-
tries, the exchange rate will shift over time.

Exchange rate risk
lTransaction risk =problem that the exchange rate will alter during a credit
period leading to a loss. Can be tackled in various ways:
lDo nothing:


  • On average, a business will gain as often as it loses from foreign
    exchange movements.

  • Dangerous strategy where averaging may not work, for example with a
    particularly large or unusual transaction.
    lTrade in the business’s home currency:

  • Often difficult to make sales in other than the customer’s home currency,
    so there may be costs.
    lMaintain a foreign currency bank account:

  • Use it to make payments and bank receipts in the foreign currency
    concerned.

  • Make transfers to and from it (by converting from or to home currency)
    when the exchange rate is favourable.

  • Ties up cash (may cause an opportunity cost), also difficult to judge
    when rate is favourable.
    lNet transactions:

  • Set payments for purchases against sales receipts in the same currency,
    perhaps using a bank account in the currency.

  • Requires equal and opposite transactions in the same currency, which
    would be unusual – could work partially.
    lUse the forward market:

  • Deal done today at an agreed (forward) rate, but the currencies are not
    exchanged until a specified future date, when the foreign debt or obliga-
    tion is due.

  • Advantage: business knows how much it will receive or pay in terms of
    home currency.

  • Disadvantage: business cannot gain from a favourable exchange rate
    movement because it is committed to the foreign exchange transaction.
    lUse currency futures:

  • Exactly the same as forward contracts, except they are for standard
    amounts and dates, which means that there can be a market for them.

  • Advantages: business knows how much it will receive or pay in terms of
    home currency and futures can be bought and sold as required.

  • Disadvantages: business cannot gain from a favourable exchange rate
    movement because it is committed to the transaction and futures are
    unwieldy (standardised amounts and dates).

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