Global Financial Services - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 10
About This Presentation
Title:

Global Financial Services

Description:

... but it can accept deposits of U.S. citizens if for the purpose of carrying out ... The branch can do almost anything that the parent bank can do. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:76
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 11
Provided by: Fina152
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Global Financial Services


1
Global Financial Services
  • Outline
  • Why and how U.S. banks engage in international
    banking
  • Foreign banks in the U.S.
  • International lending
  • Foreign exchange markets

2
Why and how U.S. banks engage in international
banking
  • Why engage in international banking?
  • Serve the needs of their customers (imports and
    exports, foreign production operations, etc).
  • Profit motive of opening new markets.
  • Global diversification.
  • Prestige of having offices in important financial
    centers around the world.

3
Why and how U.S. banks engage in international
banking
  • How do they engage in international banking?
  • Correspondent banks (large banks and foreign
    banks in the U.S.) providing international
    banking services.
  • Foreign branches (full- or limited-service).
  • Representative offices (quasi sales office with
    no loans or deposits).
  • Foreign affiliates (ownership in part or whole of
    a foreign financial service firm).
  • Edge Act offices (subsidiaries of national banks
    with offices in U.S. or abroad devoted to
    international trade).
  • International banking facilities or IBFs
    (accounting system in a bank for deposits and
    loans of foreigners with tax and reserve
    requirement benefits).

4
Foreign banks in the U.S.
  • International Banking Act of 1978
  • Allows foreign banks to operate offices in the
    U.S. without reciprocity of U.S. banks being
    allowed to operate in foreign countries.
  • An agency under this Act is a foreign bank or
    office that can provide credit and clear checks
    but cannot take deposits of U.S. citizens.
    Primarily used for foreign trade.
  • A branch is similar to an agency but it can
    accept deposits of U.S. citizens if for the
    purpose of carrying out transactions in foreign
    countries. The branch can do almost anything
    that the parent bank can do.
  • An investment company cannot accept deposits but
    can make loans and equity investments (note do
    not confuse with a domestic investment company of
    mutual fund).
  • A subsidiary is a U.S. bank that is owned by a
    foreign bank.
  • A finance company can be owned and operated by a
    foreign financial organization.

5
International lending
  • Syndicated loans
  • Large loans that enable borrowers to obtain large
    amounts of funds and lenders can diversify their
    credit risk. Lead bank can earn fee income for
    management services.
  • Two types of syndicated bank loans
  • Agreement between borrower and each lender.
  • Participation loans involving a lead bank that
    organizes a group of managing banks, who can
    refer information to other potential
    participating banks.
  • Loan pricing
  • LIBOR plus a certain number of points (also SIBOR
    in Pacific basin or Singapore interbank offered
    rate).
  • Commitment fees, underwriting fees, foreign
    taxes, etc.

6
International lending
  • Letters of credit
  • Import letters of credit are issued by a bank in
    favor of a firm in most cases. An export letter
    of credit is issued by a foreign bank to a firm
    in the U.S.
  • The letter of credit is a document from a bank
    that says it will pay the exporter when the
    conditions in the letter are met. In effect, the
    banks credit is substituted for the importer.
    The importer pays the issuing bank a fee for its
    services. Some important documents are
  • Bill of Lading (title to the merchandise)
  • Invoice (goods description, price, quantity,
    etc.)
  • Certificate of origin (country goods come from)
  • Inspection certificate (independent third party)
  • Draft or bill of exchange (drawn by exporter or
    importers bank for amount due as stated in the
    letter of credit -- payable immediately or at
    some later (i.e.,sight and time drafts,
    respectively . When the issuing bank accepts the
    draft, a bankers acceptance is created. The bank
    can sell this security in the financial
    marketplace. Both bank and importer are liable
    to pay the note.)

7
International lending
  • Letters of credit
  • Confirmed letters of credit involve the
    exporters bank, which further guarantees that
    the funds will be paid under the terms of the
    credit. Two banks further reduces credit risk.
  • Collection (via correspondent banks and foreign
    branches to facilitate the clearing process)
  • Clean collections (i.e., no documents attached,
    such as travelers checks and money orders)
  • Documentary collections (i.e., exporter sends
    documents to their bank for collection and bank
    forwards documents to importers bank for
    payment). Unlike an irrevocable letter of
    credit, the exporters payment is an obligation
    of the importer, rather than the bank issuing a
    letter of credit.

8
Foreign exchange markets
  • Foreign exchange (FX)
  • Interbank market of money center banks and major
    foreign banks.
  • Foreign exchange brokers facilitate currency
    trading.
  • Exchange rates can be direct (U.S./foreign
    currency) or indirect (foreign currency/U.S.).
  • Cross rate is the rate at which (say) euros and
    yen can be exchanged using dollars
  • Cross-rate euro/yen (/euro)(/yen) euro/yen
  • Buyer and seller agree to an exchange on the
    value date.
  • Spot market, as well as futures market and
    forward market transactions (not standardized,
    not traded on an organized exchange, and
    privately negotiated).
  • Annual forward rate (as a premium or discount
    relative to the spot rate)
  • (F - S) x 100/S x 365/n, where F is the
    forward rate, S is the spot rate and n is the
    number of days to maturity.
  • Example
  • (0.1735/franc - 0.1726/franc) x
    100/0.1726/franc x 365/90
  • 2.11 (premium over the spot rate)

9
Foreign exchange markets
  • Foreign exchange risks
  • Exchange rate risk due to open (long) or short
    positions. If a bank buys and sells equal
    amounts of a currency, it has a net covered
    position. To control this risk, use hedging
    techniques and dollar limits on positions and
    customers.
  • Interest rate risk due to mismatches in the
    maturity structure of the banks foreign exchange
    position. As interest rates change, the value of
    currencies can change.
  • Arbitrage by buying assets in one market and
    selling them immediately in another market to
    profit from price differences in the two markets.
    Interest rate parity (or covered interest
    arbitrage) normally keeps interest rate and
    foreign exchange rate values in equilibrium with
    one another in different countries.
  • p (F - S)/S, which says that the premium or
    discount is related to the forward rate
    (/foreign currency) and spot rate (/foreign
    currency).
  • p N - L, where N is the short-term interest
    rate in the U.S., and L is the short-term
    interest rate in the foreign country.

10
Foreign exchange markets
  • Foreign exchange risks
  • Credit risk associated with the counterparty
    (bank or broker) failing to meet its obligations.
    Settlement risk is a type of credit risk wherein
    one party makes transfer of payment and then the
    other party goes bankrupt.
  • Country risk is broadly defined to include
    economic, social, and political risks.
  • Sovereign risk occurs when a national government
    defaults on debts.
  • Transfer risk is related to problems in
    converting domestic currency into foreign
    exchange due to government controls or other
    reasons.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com