Dozier Hedging Alternatives
Dozier Hedging Alternatives
Dozier Hedging Alternatives
or
or
which is an annual rate of 10.03%. If having cash in the US is worth more than 10%, UK borrowing would be
a better hedging method.
Shortcut Formulas
It's a bit of a pain to do these calculations. Fortunately there is a shortcut. First, for the forward hedge, the
following formula can be used:
Cost of forward hedge
The negative number shows that it is a "cost". If the result is positive, you are "benefiting" from the hedge
relative to the value of the contract at current spot exchange rate.
For the money market hedge, the shortcut formula is:
Cost of MM hedge
If you want to assure yourself that the formulas are correct, set up the calculations we did before
algebraically and see how the currency numbers cancel out.
The main problem with these formulas is keeping track of which interest rate goes where. There is a handy
rule for this. Take the exchange rate quote that you are using, here $/. Think of this in general as X/Y. So,
the money market formula is, in general,
(X interest rate Y interest rate) / (1. + Y interest rate) or, in shorthand,
(X Y) /(1 + Y)
So if you were using a yen/dollar quote for the exchange rate, you would have yen rate minus dollar rate
divided by one plus dollar rate.
Note that none of this really solves Dozier's problem; but there is a theory that in well functioning markets,
the results from the two formulas should be equal. In other words, it shouldn't make a difference whether you
hedge in the forward market or in the money market. However this theory is based on comparing apples to
apples. Here the apples are the financial instruments whose interest rates we are comparing. Our interest
rate calculation is based on the cost of a UK bank loan to Dozier compared to rate on a bank CD. The theory
works a bit better if you use the Eurodollar rate and the Europound rate in Exhibit 4, but even these are not
precisely similar instruments.
However, there is another use for the formulas. Banks use them in pricing forward contracts! Suppose that
we set the two formulas equal to each other and do some rearrangements using my X/Y approach to stay
general and to remind us what we are doing. We can get the following result, solving for the forward rate:
Forward rate = Spot rate x (1 + X interest rate) / (1 + Y interest rate)
Remember the rule is X over Y. When the bankers get up in the morning, they turn on their screens, check
for spot exchange rates and interest rates, and plug the numbers into the formula. That determines
essentially their forward rate quote in a given currency. The time period of the interest rate used determines
the time period of the forward rate (e.g. for one-month forward, use one-month interest rates). So, what does
the forward rate tell you? Relative to the spot rate it tells you whether interest rates in one currency are
higher or lower than those in the other currency and that's about all.
So, the reason that the historical forward rates in the Dozier case are consistently below the spot rates is that
interest rates in the US have been consistently below UK rates and the relationship between the relative
interest rates have not been changing much either since the forward-spot difference has been fairly stable.