Foreign Exchange
Foreign Exchange
Foreign Exchange
INTRODUCTION .....................................................................................................................................2
Foreign exchange Risk ................................................................................................................................... 2 Foreign exchange exposure ......................................................................................................................... 2
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INTRODUCTION
Foreign exchange Risk
Foreign Exchange risk is defined as the variability of domestic currency value of assets, liabilities or operating incomes due to uncertain changes in the rate of exchange.
Transaction exposure measures changes in the value of outstanding financial obligation incurred prior to a change in exchange rates but not due to be settled until after the exchange rate change. Thus, it deals with cash flows that result from existing contractual obligations. Page | 2
Operating exposure or economic exposure measures the change in the present value of the firm resulting from any change in expected future operating cash flows of the firm caused by an unexpected change in exchange rates. The change in value depends on the effect of the exchange rate change on future sales volume, prices and costs.
Translation Exposure
Translation exposure or accounting exposure is the potential for accounting-derived changes in owners equity because of the need to translate foreign currency financial statements of foreign subsidiaries into a single reporting currency to prepare worldwide consolidated financial statements.
Each of this transaction requires that the firm either accepts or to deliver certain amount of foreign exchange at future point in time i.e. the transaction is required to be denominated in foreign currency for transaction exposure to occur.
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How ever, home-country and the entire financial community are interested in homecurrency values, the foreign currency balance-sheet accounts and income statement must be assigned home currency values. In particular, the financial statements of an MNCs overseas subsidiaries must be translated from local currency to home currency prior to consolidation with the parents financial statements.
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Translation exposure is simply the difference between exposed assets and exposed assets. The controversies to among accountants center on which assets and liabilities are exposed and on when accounting driven foreign exchange gains and losses should be recognized (reported on income statement). The crucial point to realize in putting these controversies in perspective is that such gains or losses are of an accounting nature-that is, no cash flows are necessarily involved.
Income statement items are translated at the average exchange rate during the period, except for revenue and expense items related to non-monetary assets and liabilities. The latter items, primarily depreciation expense and cost of goods sold, are translated at the same rate as the corresponding balance-sheet items. As a result, the cost of goods sold may be translated at a rate different from that used to translate sales. Current rate method The current rate method is the most prevalent in the world today. Under this method, all financial statement line items are translated at the current exchange rate with few exceptions. Line items include the following: Assets and liabilities. All assets and liabilities are translated at the current rate of exchange, that is at the rate of exchange in effect on the balance sheet date. Income statement items. All items, including depreciation and cost of goods sold are translated at either the actual exchange rate on the dates the various revenues, expenses, gains and losses were incurred or at an appropriately weighted average exchange rate for the period. Distributions. Dividends paid are translated at the exchange rate in effect on the date of payment. Equity items. Common stock and paid-in capital accounts are translated at historical rates. Year-end retained earnings consist of the original year-beginning retained earnings plus or minus any income or loss for the year. Gains or losses caused by translation adjustments are NOT included in the calculation of consolidated net income. They are reported separately and accumulated in a separate equity reserve account with a title such as cumulative translation adjustment (CTA). The biggest advantage of current rate method is that the gain or loss on translation does not pass through the income statement but goes directly to a reserve account. This eliminates the variability of reported earnings due to foreign exchange translation gains or losses. Second advantage is that the relative proportions of individual balance sheet accounts remain the same. The process does not distort balance sheet ratios such as current ratio or the debt-to-equity ratio. Page | 7
The current rate method is the simplest; all balance sheet and income items are translated at the current rate. Under this method, if a firms foreign-currency denominated assets exceeds its foreign-currency denominated liabilities, devaluation must result in a loss and a revaluation, in a gain. One variation is to translate all assets and liabilities except net fixed assets at the current rate. The main disadvantage of the current rate method is that it violates the accounting principle of carrying balance sheet accounts at historical cost. Temporal method Under the temporal method, specific assets and liabilities are translated at exchange rate consistent with the timing of the items creation. The temporal method assumes that a number of individual line item assets such as inventory and net plant and equipment are restated regularly to reflect market value. Line items include: Monetary assets (cash, marketable securities, accounts receivable and long-term receivables). They are translated at current exchange rates. Monetary liabilities (current liabilities and long-term debt) are translated at current exchange rates. Nonmonetary assets and liabilities (inventory and fixed assets) are translated at historical rates. Income statement items are translated at the average exchange rate for the period, except for items such as depreciation and cost of goods sold. Distributions. Dividends paid are translated at the exchange rate in effect on the date of payment. Equity items. Common stock and paid-in capital accounts are translated at historical rates. Year end retained earnings consist of the original year-beginning retained earnings plus or minus any income or loss for the year, plus or minus any imbalance from translation. Under the temporal method, gains or losses resulting from measurement are carried directly to current consolidated income and not to equity reserves. Hence, foreign
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exchange gains and losses arising from the translation process do introduce volatility to consolidated earnings. This appears to be a modified version of the monetary/non-monetary method. The only difference is that under the monetary/non-monetary method, inventory is always translated at the historical rate. Under the temporal method, inventory is normally translated at the historical rate, but it can be translated at the current rate if the inventory is shown on the balance sheet at market values. Despite the similarities, however, the theoretical basis of each method is different. The choice of exchange rate for translation is based on the type of asset or liability in the monetary/non-monetary method; in the temporal method, it is based on the underlying approach to evaluating cost (historical versus market). Income statement items are normally translated at an average rate for the reporting period. However, cost of goods sold and depreciation and amortization charges related to balance sheet items carried at past prices are translated at historical rates. Basic advantage of the method is that foreign nonmonetary assets are carried at their original cost in the parents consolidated statement.
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ECONOMIC/OPERATING EXPOSURE
Economic Exposure relates to the possibility that the value of the company (the Present Value of all future cash flows) will change due to unexpected changes in future exchange rates. Its magnitude is difficult to measure as it considers unexpected changes in exchange rates. Even purely domestic firms may be affected by economic exposure if there is foreign competition within the local markets.
Economic exposure is also known as operating, competitive and strategic exposure. The reason is because operating exposure reflects the economic consequences that changes in exchange rate may have on the operating income of the firm and must deal with both strategic and competitive responses to these unexpected changes. Operating exposure, also called economic exposure, competitive exposure, and even strategic exposure on occasion, measures any change in the present value of a firm resulting from changes in future operating cash flows caused by an unexpected change in exchange rates.
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payables, rent and lease payments, royalty and license fees and assorted management fees. Financing cash flows are payments for loans (principal and interest), equity injections and dividends of an inter and intra-company nature. Operating exposure is far more important for the long-run health of a business than changes caused by transaction or accounting exposure. Operating exposure is inevitably subjective, because it depends on estimates of future cash flow changes over an arbitrary time horizon. Planning for operating exposure is a total management responsibility because it depends on the interaction of strategies in finance, marketing, purchasing, and production.
export to the rest of the world and hence significantly increase its contribution to parent company cash flow. The news could, alternatively, be neutral if the subsidiary intended to ration its profits to re-invest in the same country abroad.
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