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Title: BF 464: International Finance


1
BF 464 International Finance
  • Instructor M. Nihat Solakoglu
  • Office LC105
  • Email nsolakoglu_at_bilkent.edu.tr
  • Office Phone 0 312 266 2741

2
Why is IF important?
  • Will GE India Unit Catch Eyes of Citi, B of
    A?By  Will WadeAmerican Banker , September 20,
    2004Bank of America Corp. and Citigroup Inc. may
    emerge as bidders for a big Indianoutsourcing
    operation that General Electric Co. is said to be
    trying to sell.
  • ....
  • The Wall Street Journal reported Friday that GE
    is hoping to sell all or part of GE Capital
    International Services, and that the price tag
    could reach 1billion. The operation has 12,000
    employees in India and 5,000 in Hungary, Mexico,
    and China.

3
Why is IF important?
  • What does this mean for us?
  • Markets at Risk for Additional Shocks (WSJ
    021108)
  • By Michael M. Phillips and Yuka Hayashi TOKYO --
    Global financial markets may suffer a relapse
    into the turmoil sparked by last year's collapse
    of securities backed by U.S. subprime mortgages,
    the world's top banking authorities warned.
  • The U.S. Federal Reserve and other central banks
    have pumped enough money into the banking system
    to help alleviate the worst of the initial phase
    of the credit crunch, and major banks have now
    accounted for tens of billions of dollars in
    losses that had been moldering in
    off-balance-sheet entities. But the U.S.-led
    economic slowdown and continued uncertainty about
    securities may lead banks to further reduce
    lending and choke off ...

4
Why is IF important?
  • US Federal Reserve verdict to set markets toneBy
    Chris Flood (Financial Times)
  • Published September 19 2004 1728 Last
    updated September 19 2004 1728
  • The central event for investors worldwide will
    be tomorrows meeting of the Federal Open Markets
    Committee, where US interest rates are widely
    expected to be increased to 1.75 per cent from
    1.5 per cent.
  • Philip Shaw of Investec, the banking group, said
    All eyes will be trained on the accompanying
    statement to see whether the FOMC hints at a rate
    pause before the end of the year.

Sterling slips on soft housing dataBy Steve
Johnson in London (Financial Times) Published
September 20 2004 1128 Last updated September
20 2004 1128Sterling weakened in European
morning trade on Monday amid fresh signs that the
UK housing market is slowing. ....... This adds
to the case for the Bank of England leaving rates
unchanged for at least another month, said James
Knightley, economist at ING Financial Markets.
5
Why is IF important?
  • Europeans still take a dim view of the euro
  • By Ralph Atkins in Frankfurt (Financial Times
    Jan 29th, 2007)
  • An overwhelming majority of citizens in the big
    eurozone countries believe the euro has damaged
    their national economies, highlighting the
    popular scepticism that still surrounds Europes
    eight-year-old monetary union.
  • More than two-thirds of the French, Italians and
    Spanish and more than half of Germans believe
    the single currency has had a negative impact,
    according to an FT-Harris poll. In France, just 5
    per cent said the euro has had a positive effect
    on the French economy.

Yen and sterling share the spotlight By Peter
Garnham Published January 26 2007 1111 Last
updated January 26 2007 1703 The yen and
sterling shared the spotlight this week as
speculation over the future path of interest
rates in Japan and the UK drove the currency
markets. Early in the week, the yen fell to a
near-four year low against the dollar, an
all-time low against the euro and a fourteen-year
low against the pound. The yen also dropped to a
nine-year low against the Australian
dollar. Analysts said the decision by the Bank of
Japan to leave interest rates on hold at 0.25 per
cent earlier in the month still weighed on the
Japanese currency as investors continued to put
on carry trades funding long positions in
high-yielding currencies by selling the
low-yielding yen.
6
INTRODUCTIONTHE RISE OF THE MULTINATIONAL
CORPORATION
  • Today, companies operate within a global
    marketplace and faces with global competitors.
  • I. The MNC
  • A. Definition
  • a company with production and distribution
    facilities in more than one country. Ordinarily,
  • - a parent company at home country and
  • - multiple foreign subsidiaries

7
INTRODUCTIONTHE RISE OF THE MULTINATIONAL
CORPORATION
  • Most MNE activity can be classified into two
    major categories (1) trade (exports and
    imports) and (2) foreign direct investment
    (FDI) 80 of all FDI is made by the worlds
    largest 500 MNEs

8
INTRODUCTIONTHE RISE OF THE MULTINATIONAL
CORPORATION
  • Trade consists of exports and imports
  • Exports Goods and services produced in one
    country and then sent to another country
  • Imports Goods and services produced in one
    country and bought in another country
  • Foreign Investment Consists of companies
    investing funds to start or improve operations in
    another country.

9
INTRODUCTIONTHE RISE OF THE MULTINATIONAL
CORPORATION (2002 values)
10
THE RISE OF THE MULTINATIONAL CORPORATION
  • FDI is the ownership and control of foreign
    assets.
  • FDI usually involves the ownership, whole or
    partially, of a company in a foreign country a
    foreign subsidiary.
  • FDI is different from portfolio investment, which
    is the purchase of financial securities in other
    firms for the purpose of realizing a financial
    gain when these marketable assets are sold.

11
THE RISE OF THE MULTINATIONAL CORPORATION
  • Reasons for FDI
  • Increase sales and profits.
  • Enter rapidly growing markets.
  • Reduce costs.
  • Gain a foothold in economic blocs.
  • Protect domestic markets.
  • Protect foreign markets.
  • Acquire technological and managerial know-how.

12
THE RISE OF THE MULTINATIONAL CORPORATION
FDI flows (1998 values)
13
THE RISE OF THE MULTINATIONAL CORPORATION
  • Common misconceptions about MNEs
  • MNEs have far-flung operations or earn most of
    their revenues overseas.
  • MNEs are globally monolithic and excessively
    powerful in political terms.
  • MNEs produce homogeneous products for the world
    market and through their efficient techniques are
    able to dominate local markets everywhere.

14
THE RISE OF THE MULTINATIONAL CORPORATION
  • In fact,
  • MNEs earn most of their revenues in their
    home-regions.
  • The largest 500 MNEs are not spread around the
    world but clustered around the triad.
  • These MNEs engage not in global competition but
    in triad/regional competition this rivalry
    effectively eliminates enduring political
    advantage.
  • MNEs adapt their products for the local market.

15
THE RISE OF THE MULTINATIONAL CORPORATION
  • Rise of multinational corporation was not
    anticipated by classical trade theory (Smith,
    Ricardo)
  • Comparative Advantage - Each nation should
    specialize in the production and export of those
    goods that it can produce with highest relative
    efficiency and import those goods that other
    nations can produce relatively more efficiently.
  • Underlying assumption Goods and services can
    move internationally, but factors of production
    (e.g. Capital, land and labor) are relatively
    immobile.
  • aExistence of MNCs is based on international
    mobility of certain factors of production.
  • aPrime transmitter of competitive forces is the
    MNCs (E.g. China)

16
THE RISE OF THE MULTINATIONAL CORPORATION
  • B. EVOLUTION OF THE MNC
  • Reasons to Go Global
  • 1. Raw materials
  • 2. More markets
  • 3. Minimize costs of production

17
THE RISE OF THE MULTINATIONAL CORPORATION
  • 1. RAW MATERIAL SEEKERS
  • exploit markets in other countries
  • historically first to appear
  • modern-day counterparts
  • Anaconda Copper
  • Standard Oil
  • Exxon- Mobil

18
THE RISE OF THE MULTINATIONAL CORPORATION
  • 2. MARKET SEEKERS
  • produce and sell in foreign markets
  • heavy foreign direct investors
  • representative firms
  • IBM
  • Nestle
  • Levi Strauss

19
THE RISE OF THE MULTINATIONAL CORPORATION
  • 3. COST MINIMIZERS
  • Seek lower-cost production abroad
  • Motive to remain cost competitive
  • Representative firms
  • Texas Instruments
  • Intel
  • Motorola

20
THE RISE OF THE MULTINATIONAL CORPORATION
  • D. THE MNC A BEHAVIORAL VIEW
  • Characterized by
  • - its state of mind and
  • - not by its size and worldwide dispersion of
    its assets
  • Distinguishing characteristics from other firms
    is its commitment to seeking out, undertaking and
    integrating manufacturing, marketing, RD and
    financing opportunities on a global, not
    domestic, basis.
  • Necessary complements to integration of worldwide
    operations are
  • - flexibility
  • - adaptability
  • - speed

21
THE RISE OF THE MULTINATIONAL CORPORATION
  • Key to international competitiveness is the
    ability of management to adjust to change and
    volatility at an ever faster rate.
  • I am not here to predict the world. I am here to
    be sure Ive got a company that is strong enough
    to respond whatever happens. Jack Welch, ex-CEO
    of GE

22
THE RISE OF THE MULTINATIONAL CORPORATION
  • E. THE GLOBAL MANAGER
  • 1. Understands political and
  • economic differences
  • 2. Searches for most cost-
  • effective suppliers
  • 3. Evaluates changes on value of
    the firm.

23
PART II.MULTINATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
THEORY AND PRACTICE
  • I. THE MULTINATIONAL FINANCIAL SYSTEM
  • A. Main Objective of MNC
  • Maximize shareholder wealth as measured by share
    price. Hence, make financing and investment
    decisions that add as much value as possible
  • - Shareholders are the legal owners
  • - Minimize (hostile) takeover risks
  • - It is the best (or maybe the only) way to
    maximize economic benefits of all stakeholders

24
MULTINATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT THEORY AND
PRACTICE
  • II. FUNCTIONS OF FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
  • A. Two Basic Functions
  • 1. Financing (Acquisition of funds)
  • 2. Investing (Allocation of those funds over
    time so that shareholder wealth is maximized)
  • B. Additional Factors Facing the MNC Executive
  • 1. Political risk
  • 2. Economic risk

25
MULTINATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT THEORY AND
PRACTICE
  • III. THEORETICAL FOUNDATIONS
  • A. Useful Concepts from Financial
    Economics
  • 1. Arbitrage
  • 2. Market Efficiency
  • 3. Capital Asset Pricing

26
MULTINATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT THEORY AND
PRACTICE
  • Arbitrage
  • Definition Purchase of assets or commodities on
    one markets for immediate resale in another in
    order to profit from a price discrepancy.
  • e.g., Tax arbitrage - shifting of gains or
    losses from one tax jurisdiction to another

27
MULTINATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT THEORY AND
PRACTICE
  • Market Efficiency
  • An efficient market is one in which the prices of
    traded securities readily incorporate new
    information.
  • Hence, one cannot rely on historical prices or
    publicly available information to consistently
    benefit from trading.

28
MULTINATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT THEORY AND
PRACTICE
  • Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM)
  • Refers to the valuation of securities based on
    expected risks and return.
  • Assumes a specific relationship between risk
    (measured by return variability) and required
    asset return a stocks required rate of return
    is equal to the risk-free rate of return plus a
    risk premium that reflects the riskiness of the
    stock after diversification.
  • Two source of variability
  • (a) Systematic (or non-diversifiable) risk
    Marketwide influences that affect all sources
    (e.g. State of the economy)
  • - relevant even for diversified investor
  • - investor must be compensated for bearing that
    risk
  • (b) Unsystematic (or diversifiable) risk
    specific to given firm
  • - irrelevant for diversified investor

29
MULTINATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT THEORY AND
PRACTICE
  • Total risk is also important for the firm (not
    only systematic risk)
  • 1. Adverse Impact on expected cash flow
  • - lower sales and higher costs
  • 2. Justifies hedging activities of MNC to
    reduce total risk
  • 3. International diversification reduces total
    risk
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