Title: INBU 4200 INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
1 INBU 4200 INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
- Lecture 4
- The Foreign Exchange Market
- Quoting Currencies
2Defining The Foreign Exchange Market
- The FOREX market Performs Three Important
Functions - (1) Generates rates of exchange.
- The ratio of one currency to another.
- These determine costs and returns to global
businesses. - (2) Facilitates the conversion of one currency
into another. - Through the buying and selling of currencies.
- Allows global firms to move in and out of foreign
currency as needed. - (3) Offers contracts to manage foreign exchange
exposure. - These hedging contracts allow global firms to
offset foreign currency exposures. - Thus, they can concentrate on their core business.
3Who Provides These Important FX Functions?
- Large global banks (e.g., HSBC, UBS, Citibank)
acting on behalf of - Their external clients (primarily global firms)
- Acting in a broker capacity at the request of
their clients. - Meeting foreign currency business needs of their
clients. - Exporters, importers, multinational firms, hedge
funds, etc - Global banks also trade for their own internal
bank accounts to generate profits for their
banks. - Acting in a dealer (trader) capacity
- Taking positions in currencies to make a profit.
- In meeting the needs of their clients and their
own internal trading, these global banks
establish the tone of the market. - This is through the market maker function,
whereby they - Quote prices to other parties and commit to
buying and selling currencies at their quoted
prices.
4Making the Market in FX
- The Market Maker Function Involves Two Primary
Activities - (1) Willingness of the market maker to provide
the market with on-going two way quotes upon
request - Price at which they will buy a currency
- Price at which they will sell a currency
- This function provides the market with
transparency - (2) Willingness of the market maker to actually
buy and/or sell at the prices they quote - Thus the market maker offers firm prices into
the market! - Thus function provides the market with liquidity.
5How Do Market Makers Quote Currencies?
- We already know from a previous discussion of two
possible ways of quoting currencies - European Terms Quote
- Number of foreign currency units per 1 U.S.
dollar. - 119 yen to the dollar
- American Terms Quote
- U.S. dollars and cents per 1 unit of the foreign
currency - 1.2100 to one Euro
- Which quote is used?
- American terms quoted currencies historically
related to non-decimal currencies (i.e., the
pound, Australian and New Zealand dollar). - Also by government decision, i.e., the Euro. ECB
decided to quote the currency in American terms. - The majority of the worlds currencies are quoted
in European terms, while the majority of the
worlds major currencies are quoted in American
terms.
6ISO Currency Designations
- All foreign currencies have been assigned an
International Standards Organization (ISO)
abbreviation. - E.g., USD JPY GBP EUR CNY HKD MXP AUD ZAR
- For individual countries please see
http//www.oanda.com/site/help/iso_code.shtml - Since the exchange rate is simply the ratio
(i.e., value) of one currency against another,
the market makers express this relationship using
the two currencies ISO designations. - For Example
- USD/JPY
- USD/MXP
- EUR/USD
- GBP/USD
7Base and Quote Currency
- Thus, a complete market maker currency quote is
always represented by the ratio of one currency
to another and is always designated using ISO
terms. - Since a complete quote must have two ISO
designations (e.g., EUR/USD or USD/JPY) - The first ISO currency quoted is called the base
currency. - The second ISO currency quoted is called the
quote currency. - For examples above
- EUR is the base currency and USD is the quote
currency. - USD is the base currency and JPY is the quote
currency.
8Bid and Ask Quotes
- Furthermore, a market maker currency quote always
provides two quoted numbers. - The first number quoted is what the market maker
will buy a currency for (i.e., the bid quote). - The second quoted number is what the market
marker will sell a currency at (i.e., the ask
quote, or offer quote). - Recall that a complete quote provides two
prices (i.e., a two way quote or both a buy and
a sell price) - Example EUR/USD 1.2102/1.2106
- The first number is the market makers bid quote
(or buy price) - The second number is the market makers ask quote
(or sell price) - Note The bid quote is always lower than the ask
quote.
9Interpreting a Currency Quote
- Example of a complete ISO foreign exchange
quotation - EUR/USD 1.2102/1.2106
- What can we note about the above quote?
- First ISO base currency/ISO quote currency
- AND
- Second Bid quote/ask quote
- So in the above example
- EUR the base currency is the Euro
- USD the quote currency is the U.S. dollar
- 1.2102 is the bid price
- 1.2106 is the ask price
10But What Do the Numbers Mean?
- Since the market maker is the one quoting
currency prices, we need to start by looking at
the numbers from the standpoint of the market
maker. - The bid quote is the price at which the market
maker will buy a currency (it is what they are
biding for it). - The ask quote is the price at which the market
maker will sell a currency (it is what they are
asking for it). - But what currency is the market maker buying or
selling? - They are always quoting prices at which they will
buy or sell the base currency (against the quote
currency).
11FX Quote Example
- Assume a market maker provides the following
EUR/USD quote - 1.2102/1.2106
- Given this quote
- The market maker will buy euros from the market
at? - 1.2102
- Or sell euros to the market at?
- 1.2106
- Assume the following USD/JPY
- 110.12/110.20
- The market maker will buy dollars from the market
at? - 110.12
- Or sell dollars to the market at?
- 110.20
- Note Again Regardless of the type of quote, the
ask price is always higher than the bid.
12A Quote from the Standpoint of Other than a
Market Maker
- Assume you are a corporate and you receive the
following GBP/USD quote from a market maker bank - 1.8020/1.8050
- If you wanted to buy pounds from the market
maker, what would you pay (in dollars) for each
pound? - You would pay the ask price, or 1.8050 for each
pound - Note this is your price to buy pounds or sell
dollars. - If you wanted to sell pounds to the market maker,
what would you get (in dollars) for each pound
sold? - You would get the bid price, or 1.8020
- Note this is your price to sell pounds or buy
dollars.
13One More Example
- Assume you are a corporate and you receive the
following USD/JPY quote from a market maker bank - 112.50/112.75
- Note, now the base currency is the dollar.
- If you wanted to buy dollars from the market
maker, what would you pay in yen? - You would pay the ask price, or 112.75 for each
dollar. - Note this is your price to buy dollars or sell
yen. - If you wanted to sell dollars to the market
maker, what would you get in yen for each dollar? - You would get the bid price, or 112.50 for each
dollar. - Note this is your price to sell dollars or buy
yen. - Remember The market maker is always buying or
selling the base currency (against the quote
currency).
14Lets Look at Real Time Currency Quotes
- Go to the following web-site
- http//www.fxstreet.com/nou/graph/streamingchart.a
sp - At this site, go to
- Live Currency Rates (U.S. Dollar/Major
currencies) - Observe ISO quotes.
- Observe bid and ask quotes.
- Observe what currency and at what price the
market maker is buying or selling (base
currency). - Observe what price you (a non-market maker) would
buy or sell the base currency to the market
maker. - Observe changes in bid and ask quotes.
- What do these mean?
- Another site http//www.forextrading.com/
15How are Some Currencies Quoted?
- Euro EUR/USD Swedish
Krona USD/SEK - British Pound GBP/USD Norwegian
Kroner USD/KOR - Australian Dollar AUD/USD Israeli
Shekel USD/ILS - New Zealand Dollar NZD/USD Danish
Krone USD/DKK - Russian Ruble USD/RUB
- Yen USD/JPY Malaysian
Ringgit USD/MYR - Swiss Franc USD/CHF Korean
Won USD/KRW - Canadian Dollar USD/CAD Indian
Rupee USD/INR - Mexican Peso USD/MXN Philippine
Peso USD/PHP - Hong Kong Dollar USD/HKD Argentina
Peso USD/ARS - Singapore Dollar USD/SGD
- Brazilian Real USD/BRL
- South African Rand USD/ZAR
- Thai Baht USD/THB
- Note American terms quoted currencies use the
foreign currency as the base currency and
European terms quoted currencies use the U.S.
dollar as the base currency.
16FX Spreads to Market Maker Banks
- Recall, that all market makers provide both a bid
(i.e., buy) and an ask (i.e., sell) quote for a
currency. - Recall the ask is always higher.
- The difference between the bid and ask price is
the spread to the market maker. - This represents the market makers profit from
executing a round transaction (i.e., an equal
buy and sell for a currency). - Assume the following GBP/USD quote 1.7921/1.7929
- Bid at 1.7921
- Ask at 1.7929
- What is the spread to the market maker on a
round transaction (assume 10 million pound
transactions) - Ask 1.7929 x 10,000,000 17,929,000 (price
to sell pounds) - Bid 1.7921 x 10,000,000 17,921,000 (price
to buy pounds) - Spread (Commission) 8,000 (on
round transaction)
17Measuring the FX Bid Ask Spread
- Bid Ask Percentage Spread Formula
- (Ask price Bid price) / Ask price x 100
- Example assume the following quote
- GBP/USD 1.7921/1.7929
- Calculate the Percentage Spread
- (Ask price Bid price) / Ask price x 100
- (1.7929 1.7921) / 1.7929 x 100
- 0.045
18Observations About Bid/Ask Spreads
- Bid/ask spreads increase with exchange rate
volatility. - Bid/ask spreads decrease with increases in market
maker competition. - Bid/ask spreads larger in retail market than in
wholesale (i.e., interbank) market. - Wholesale market global bank to global bank
- Retail market bank to customer (client of bank)
- Profits for banks come primarily from their
intermediary role (acting for clients) as opposed
to speculative trades. - Bid ask spreads critical here!
- Also banks adjust their bid and ask rates to
adjust own positions. - Making trades more or less attractive to others!
19Adjusting Bid Ask Quotes to Adjust Foreign
Exchange Holdings
- Market makers adjust their bid and ask quotes to
adjust their own holdings of currencies. - Assume the competition is quoting the GBP/USD as
- Bid 1.7921 (price at which the competition
will buy pounds) - Ask 1.7929 (price at which the competition will
sell pounds) - If your bank wanted to increase its holdings of
pounds (or decrease its holding of dollars) it
will quote - More than 1.7921 (raise its bid quote) and
attract more pounds! - If your bank wanted to decrease its holdings of
pounds (or increase its holdings of dollars) it
will quote - Less than 1.7929 (lower its ask quote) and sell
more pounds! - This is why you need to shop around for the best
deal.
20Quotes According to Delivery Time Period
- Spot Quote Quote for immediate transactions.
- Actual delivery will take place at the end of 2
business days. - Saturday and Sunday are not business days
- There may be a one day delivery depending upon
the location (e.g., between Canada and the U.S.,
or within Europe). - Two way spot quotes are provided by market
makers. - Forward Quote Quote for more than 3 business
day transactions. - Actual delivery to take place at the end of 3
business days or more from now. - Two way forward quotes are provided by market
makers.
21Examples of Spot FX Quotes
- September 8, 2004 Feb 6, 2006
- American Terms
- U.K. (pound) 1.7867 1.7471
- Eurozone (euro) 1.2186 1.1960
- Australia (dollar) .6964 .7421
- European Terms
- Japan (yen) 109.30 119.02
- Mexico (peso) 11.584 10.458
- China (RMB) 8.2781 8.0572
- Sources
- http//online.wsj.com/public/us and
http//fx.sauder.ubc.ca/today.html
22What Moves a Floating Spot Rate
- Anything that affects the demand for or supply of
the currency on foreign exchange markets,
including - Relevant economic data ,such as
- trade data,
- Inflation data,
- unemployment date, GDP data and
- Central bank key interest rates (e.g., Federal
Funds rate or comparable rates in foreign
countries) and changes in these rates. - Announcements by key officials (e.g., central
bankers) - What is important?
- The actual data itself
- And the markets expectation for this data.
- Was the reported data in line with market
expectations? - Also important are political/military events.
23Forward FX Rates
- Involves contracting today for the future
purchase or sale of foreign exchange. - Forward rates are quoted today by market makers.
- As with spot rates, forward rates are two way
quotes, or bid and ask prices. - Bid at which they will buy the base currency in
the future. - Ask at which they will sell the base currency in
the future. - Forward rates can be
- Worth more than spot (premium)
- Worth less than spot (discount)
- Equal to spot (flat)
24Examples of Forward FX Rates
- September 8, 2004 February 6, 2006
- American Terms
- U.K. (Pound) 1.7867 1.7471
- 1 month forward 1.7818 1.7472
- European Terms
- Japan (Yen) 109.30 119.02
- 1 month forward 109.13 118.60
- Sources
- http//online.wsj.com/public/us and
http//fx.sauder.ubc.ca/today.html -
25Determining Forward Discounts and Forward Premiums
- Question On September 8, 2004, was the pound
selling at a forward discount or forward premium? - U.K. (Pound) 1.7867
- 1 month forward 1.7818
- Answer
- Use the formula Forward rate spot rate.
- Discount 1 month forward is less than the spot
by .0049 (1.7818 1.7867 -.0049). - Note the dollar was selling at a premium (less
dollars to buy a pound forward than to buy a
pound spot).
26Determining Forward Discounts and Forward Premiums
- Question On February 6, 2006, was the pound
selling at a forward discount or forward premium? - U.K. (Pound) 1.7471
- 1 month forward 1.7474
- Answer
- Use the formula Forward rate spot rate.
- Premium 1 month forward is more than the spot
by .0003 (1.7474 1.7471 .0003). - Note the dollar was selling at a discount (more
dollars to buy a pound forward than to buy a
pound spot).
27Determining Forward Discounts and Forward Premiums
- Question On February 6, 2006, was the Japanese
yen selling at a forward premium or forward
discount? - Japan (yen) 119.02
- 1 month forward 118.60
- Answer
- First, convert to American terms (119.02
.008402 118.60 .008432). - Use the formula Forward rate spot rate.
- Yen 1 month forward is worth more than the spot
by .00003 (.008432 - .008402 .00003). - Premium Yen is selling at a premium (.00003).
- Note Dollar is selling at a discount (more
dollars to buy a yen forward than a yen spot)