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Practical financial managment 7e LASHER chapter 18

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1. Foundations. 2. Financial Background: A Review of Accounting, Financial Statements, and Taxes. 3. Cash Flows and Financial Analysis. 4. Financial Planning. 5. The Financial System, Corporate Governance, and Interest. Part II: DISCOUNTED CASH FLOW AND THE VALUE OF SECURITIES. 6. Time Value of Money. 7. The Valuation and Characteristics of Bonds. 8. The Valuation and Characteristics of Stock. 9. Risk and Return. Part III: BUSINESS INVESTMENT DECISIONS--CAPITAL BUDGETING. 10. Capital Budgeting. 11. Cash Flow Estimation. 12. Risk Topics and Real Options in Capital Budgeting. 13. Cost of Capital. Part IV: LONG-TERM FINANCING ISSUES. 14. Capital Structure and Leverage. 15. Dividends. Part V: OPERATIONS ISSUES--WORKING CAPITAL MANAGEMENT AND PLANNING. 16. The Management of Working Capital. 17. Corporate Restructuring. 18. International Finance.

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Chapter 18 International Finance

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International Finance

Business has become increasingly international

International business has changed from import/export to operating scale businesses in other countries.

full-Multi-national companies (MNCs) have worldwide operations

Investing in foreign securities is common

Globalization

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Currency Exchange

Companies expect to be paid in their home currency

Buying from a firm in another country requires that country’s currency

A US department store importing British sweaters must exchange dollars for British pounds

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The Foreign Exchange Market

Organized to trade/exchange currencies

Network of brokers/banks based in financial centers around the world

Exchange Rate Tables

State the price of one currency in terms of another

Exchange rate tables show two reciprocal rates for each currency,

Direct Quote

Indirect Quote

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Exchange Rates

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Concept Connection Example 18-1

Exchange Rates

An American retail store orders 500 sweaters from Britain costing

£35,000, when the exchange rate is $1.5740 = 1£.

Store’s Cost is

£35,000 x $1.5740 = $55,090

Exchange rates affect both:

The volume of trade between the two countries

The cost of imported products in the US

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Exchange Rate Risk

Exchange rates move constantly

Exchange rate risk is the chance of a gain or loss from exchange rate movement that occurs during a transaction

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Exchange Rate Risk

Exchange rate movements affect the profitability of international

transactions

expected

This variability in cost/profit is exchange rate risk

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Spot and Forward Rates

well-9

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Hedging with Forward Exchange Rates

Exchange rate risk can be hedged with forward contracts

Lock in exchange rates for anticipated foreign currency needs

Eliminates exchange rate risk

Accomplished by buying the currency at the forward rate for future delivery

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Supply and Demand—The Source of Exchange Rate Movement

Origins of Supply & Demand for Foreign Exchange

Supply & demand stem from trade and the flow of investment money between nations

Americans want a British product

British want an American product

Supply and demand curves that determine exchange rates are derived from each country’s demand for the other’s products

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Foreign Exchange: British Pounds and

U.S Dollars

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Foreign Exchange: British Pounds and

U.S Dollars

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Why the Exchange Rates Move

Exchange rates move in response to shifts in the supply and demand for currencies in the two countries

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Governments and the International Monetary System

When a nation’s currency strengthens

Imported goods become cheaper

The nation’s exported goods become more expensive in foreign countries

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Governments and the International Monetary System

A strong dollar makes imports cheaper improving our standard of living But it makes US products more expensive in other countries so people buy fewer and we manufacture less for export reducing employment

A weak dollar makes US products cheaper in other countries with the

reverse result

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Governments and the International Monetary System

Exchange rates impact both employment and the general standard of living

Governments are interested in maintaining a balance and sometimes

intervene to keep rates within reasonable limits

Buy and sell their own currencies

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The International Monetary System

Rules by which countries exchange currencies

A floating exchange rate system has been in place since the early 1970s

Floating  Free market forces determine rates

Between 1945 and the early 1970s a fixed exchange rate system was used

Rates set by international treaty

Each country was required to hold its exchange rate nearly constant relative to the

US dollar

Proved unworkable post WWII

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Not all currencies are convertible

Can’t be exchanged for other currencies at market-determined rates

The currencies of China and Russia have historically been

inconvertible

Inconvertibility is an impediment to international trade

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The Balance of Trade

The net financial flow between two countries from trade

If US imports > exports: A trade deficit exists with that county

If imports < exports: A trade surplus exists

A long-term deficit can significantly impair the deficit country’s economy

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International Capital Markets

Investments in foreign countries are common today

Portfolio investments in foreign securities

Direct investments in plant and equipment overseas

The US dollar has a unique status

It is the world’s leading currency

Often serves as “international money”

Many international contracts are denominated in U.S dollars even though none of the contracting parties are American

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The Eurodollar Market

Eurodollars are American dollar deposits in foreign banks

The Eurodollar market is created when banks lend deposits to international businesses and foreign governments

Borrowers use Eurodollars

To pay for U.S exports

To invest in American stocks and bonds

As a medium of exchange

Deposits are not just in European banks

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The International Bond Market

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Most are denominated in U.S dollars

Advantages to foreign buyers

Securities regulations in foreign countries require less disclosure

Issued in bearer form

Most governments don’t withhold income taxes on Eurobond interest

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Limiting the amount of profit that can be withdrawn

Requiring the purchase of key inputs from local suppliers

Limiting the prices of products sold within the country

Requiring part ownership by citizens of the host country

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Transaction and Translation Risks

Transaction gains/losses

Arise from exchange rate changes that occur during current international transfers of money

Have real profit, cash flow and tax impact

Translation gains/losses

Arise when assets and liabilities held in a foreign country are translated for consolidation on a parent company’s books in its home currency

Relevance of Translation Gains and Losses

Translation gains/losses only exist on paper

Not “realized”

Shown cumulatively as an adjustment to equity

Not taxable since not realized

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Free Trade, the Theory of Comparative Advantage, and

Protectionism

Free Trade

Implies that firms

in both countries are free to market or manufacture their products in either country

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The Theory of Comparative Advantage

A two country–two product community will be better off if each nation specializes

in what it does best and buys the other product from the other country

Comparative Advantage is a powerful argument for free trade in the long run

But there is a great deal of economic pain among workers and investors in the short run

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A general movement of the world economy toward free trade

Along with an increase in international business

Governments are promoting the process

Proponents say increased production due to unrestricted trade leads to a higher standard of living for everyone

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Most agree on the comparative advantage benefit of free trade: More total

production …. BUT

Not all agree globalization is a good thing

Free trade includes putting factories in poor countries, paying extremely low wages, and making huge profits on the cheap labor

Many say this amounts to exploitation of underdeveloped countries

Opponents also maintain that it leads to

A widening gap between rich and poor

Excessive corporate power

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The Migration of Jobs

Outsourcing

Today outsourcing means moving work overseas

Leads to a loss of jobs at home

Originally limited to low end jobs

But outsourcing of knowledge-based jobs began in the 1990’s

Certain low wage nations have some highly educated people e.g., India

Technology is making it possible to transfer knowledge functions

electronically

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Labor Migration and Illegal Immigration

Developed countries often lack the people to do low-end jobs

Creates incentives for labor migration from undeveloped countries

The problem is serious in US due to the historical ease of

entering the country and staying without permission

11.5 million illegal immigrants

Currently a major political problem

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The Balance of Trade with China and its Inconvertible Currency

China has moved towards a free market economy in the last 30 years

An undervalued currency makes Chinese products extremely cheap in US

Inconvertible – Exchange rate doesn’t float

40% price advantage over US manufacturers

Trade deficit of more than $280 billion per year

A conservative U.S government maintains the low prices of Chinese goods benefit Americans

Another major political issue

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Sovereign Debt

Sovereign governments collect taxes and spend on services

If spending exceeds taxes have a deficit and gov’t borrows by selling bonds

Deficits accumulate into national debts

Interest also paid out of taxes

In a recession tax income falls but services and interest continue

Gov’t depends on continued borrowing.

Investors recognize weakness and stop lending

CRISIS – Government may fail

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European Sovereign Debt Crisis

At least 5 of 17 Eurozone countries are facing financial crises

Could cause governments to fail

Started with the post 2008 recession

Important Note: Eurozone countries give up an economic control when join the zone.

Can’t print money to pay on national debts.

Troubled countries are

Greece, Ireland, Italy, Portugal and Spain

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Banks and Contagion

When a bond issuer is in financial trouble the value of its existing bonds falls

European banks invest in those bonds so their assets shrink when countries are in crisis.

Banks fail if the value of their assets falls too far

Banks holding sovereign debt are all over Europe

The failure of a country in crisis can trigger bank failures across Europe

Banks stop lending

Lack of commercial credit deepens the recession

Hence we say the crisis is contagious

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Actions to Combat the Crisis

Stronger Eurozone countries (largely Germany and France), the European

Central Bank (ECB), and the IMF have contributed to several bailouts of Greece and other troubled countries.

European Financial Stability Facility was set up to provide emergency lending.

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Tensions in the Eurozone

People in the healthy economies, are tired of pouring money into failing

countries

People in crisis countries resent austerity programs forced on them

Financial experts say there’s as much as a 75% chance that at least one country will exit the zone.

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