International Financial Management: Hedging Foreign Exchange Risk
International Financial Management: Hedging Foreign Exchange Risk
International Financial Management: Hedging Foreign Exchange Risk
Investors can, in principle, perform any foreign exchange hedging that the corporation can. Consequently, the corporation need not devote resources to the elimination of diversifiable or hedgeable risk. Indeed, hedging might be counterproductive by harming the interests of shareholders.
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Similarly, a firm which takes over other firms in different industries might displease shareholders who can diversify their portfolio directly by purchasing shares themselves in those industries.
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Exchange-rate volatility may make earnings volatile and thus increase the probability of financial distress. If hedging reduces the nominal volatility of the firm's earnings, it will in turn reduce the expected value of the costs of financial distress (including bankruptcy) ... Some of these costs are borne by creditors, in which case a reduction in expected distress costs will reduce lenders required rate of return.
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Thus, in comparison to the unhedged firm, the reduced costs of financial distress and the lowered borrowing costs may offset the costs of the hedges. Another way of putting the argument is that hedging reduces the market risk of a company. By hedging, a companys b is lower so its risk premium is lower. Thus the firms expected net earnings would be discounted at a lower interest rate. However, expected earnings are reduced due to the costs of the hedges. Its net worth could be higher or lower.
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Hedging reduces the risk of bankruptcy and financial distress, but is likely to reduce the value of the firm by [Vu Vh], the cost of hedging.
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Hedging defined: A firm or an individual hedges by taking a position, such as acquiring a cash flow, an asset or a contract, that will rise (or fall) in value to offset a fall (or rise) in the value of an existing position. A perfect hedge is one eliminating the possibility of future gain or loss due to unexpected changes in the value of the existing position.
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Transactions exposure
A long position: When a firm has accounts receivable in foreign exchange at some time in the future, it is exposed to transactions exposure - losses or gains due to unexpected changes in the exchange rate.
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Transactions exposure
The payoff from an unhedged long position, say accounts receivable in 90 days in euros.
The expected exchange rate (pound price of the euro) in 90 days is given by F90,
In 90 days, we will realize a spot rate, S90.
Consequently, the unanticipated change in the exchange rate or forecast error is indicated by:
[F90 - S90]
This represents the gain (if positive) or the loss (if negative) per unit of the euro in which the firm has long foreign exchange exposure.
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Transaction exposure
If the firm is long 100,000 euros (accounts receivable, for example) the unhedged firm gains if the spot price of the euro is above the forward price upon receipt of the euros.
Payoff diagram for accounts receivable (a long position in foreign exchange)
An unanticipated gain
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Transaction exposure
If the spot price is less than the forward, the firm will lose: [F90 - S90] 100,000 pounds.
Payoff diagram for accounts receivable (a long position in foreign exchange)
An unanticipated loss
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Transactions exposure
If you are short euros (accounts payable, for example), you will lose [F90 - S90] 100,000 pounds if the spot price is higher.
Payoff diagram for accounts payable (a short position in foreign exchange)
An unanticipated loss
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Transaction exposure
If the spot price is lower, you will gain by not being hedged.
Payoff diagram for accounts payable (a short position in foreign exchange)
An unanticipated gain
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Transaction exposure
Example: You are the owner of FU YANG FLYING EAGLE DUMPLINGS and have sold $100,000 worth of rice dumplings (zongzi) to a Chinese restaurant in San Francisco. You will be paid $100,000 in 90 days. Assume that the current spot exchange rate is 8.2767 yuan to the dollar. There is some risk that you may suffer a loss if you do not sell the accounts receivable in the forward market. Suppose, for example that the IMF and the US Treasury accomplish their goals of a yuan appreciation. You will lose in terms of yuan, should you not hedge.
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Transaction exposure
Here is the payoff diagram assuming a 10% revaluation of the yuan.
The unanticipated revaluation of the yuan has reduced the yuan value of your accounts receivable by -0.8267 yuan per dollar. Since you receive $100,000 in 90 days, their new value in yuan are only 7.45*100,000=745,000 yuan. In other words, you have lost (8.2767-7.4500)*100,000= 82,670 yuan. Chapter 4 Page 17
Transaction exposure
An unexpected devaluation of the yuan, for example due to capital account liberalization, may increase the yuan value of your accounts receivable by 1.000 yuan per dollar. Since you receive $100,000 in 90 days, their new value in yuan are 9.28*100,000 =928,000 yuan. In other words, you might unexpectedly gain as depicted in the payoff diagram.
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forward for delivery at F90 , or 8.2767. When you receive the accounts payable, deliver the $100,000 to settle your forward contract.
If you sell the entire amount of your accounts receivable, you have a perfect hedge that eliminates all possibility of gain or loss from an unexpected change in the exchange rate.
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With a perfect hedge in the forward market you lose on one contract what you gain on the other. If the spot rate falls to 7.45 in 90 days, you lose 0.83 yuan per dollar of accounts receivable, but you gain 0.83 yuan per dollar on the forward sale contract.
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If the spot price of the dollar falls below 8.28, the put option is in the money and you will exercise it to sell the proceeds from accounts receivable.
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4. Currency invoicing by selling your zongzi in yuan, you shift your foreign exchange risk to the importer. Since this passes the cost of hedging to the importer, you may have to settle for worse terms in your sale of rice dumplings.
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5. In the terms and conditions of a letter of credit, you may specify risk contingency clauses as to which party pays what amount when there is an unexpected change in the exchange rate.
Both parties can share in the exchange rate risk with a currency contingency clause.
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Operations exposure
Operating exposure measures the changes in the net present value of a firm due to unexpected changes in exchange rates. It is a forward looking concept which reestimates the discounted cash flow in foreign currency in terms of home currency for overseas operations following an unexpected change in the exchange rate.
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Operations exposure
Parker Pens European operations involve both the production and sale of pens in the European Community. It has a partial natural hedge in that its direct costs of production are in euros. When the dollar price of the euro rises, both expected revenues and costs in euros rise by the same percent.
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Operations exposure
However, if the cash flow in euros is positive, the euro appreciation adds to earnings in dollars. When the dollar price of the euro falls, expected net earnings in euros suffer a fall in value in terms of dollars. This is known as operating exposure.
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With no change in the business plan, an unexpected translation loss of $863 million takes place.
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However, management has an opportunity to adjust the business plan to offset these losses. It needs to increase its sales revenues in euros by approximately 28.9% to offset the decline in the value of the euro. The change in the business plan can involve: A rise in the profit margin in euros by raising prices A rise in revenues in euros by expanding the volume of output, or A combination of higher prices and increased output
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The key is to raise net earnings in euros by the percentage of the depreciation.
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Parker Pen, Europe could expand its operations in Europe to profit from the increased euro appreciation.
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Managing operational exposure by diversification Example of diversifying operations: Japanese automobile firms have managed their foreign exchange risk by opening plants in the United States. Their dollar revenues can be used in part to pay wages, rents, salaries, and other operational expenses in dollars. The decline in yen revenue due to dollar devaluation is offset in large part by the decline in costs when reckoned in yen. Net income, however, is still adversely affected.
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The swap enables both firms to have lower borrowing costs in foreign currency.
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A U.S. firm may have euro receipts from its exports and a German firm may have dollar receipts from its exports. Each borrows in its currency of comparative advantage, and swap the loan obligation.
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The loan payment is thus an offsetting matching currency flow ongoing export receipts in foreign currency are used to pay ongoing interest and principal on the foreign currency loan.
Swap dealers usually intermediate currency swaps to avoid the problem of double coincidence of loan wants.
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Conclusion
A firms free cash flow from overseas operations is subject to exchange rate risk. By changing economic variables, purchasing contracts, or seeking offsetting matching currency flows, a firm can hedge against exchange rate losses.
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