Title: Political Risk Measurement and Management
1Political Risk Measurement and Management
2Political Risk and Interest Parity Theorems
- Deviations From Real Interest Parity
-
- Political risk can be thought of as creating
a divergence between the physical returns
possible from an investment and the expected
value of returns from an investment in a country
where there is some degree of political risk. -
- A country with (disadvantageous) political
risk has less capital and higher real interest
rates than it would otherwise have. In
particular, there is an interest differential
between the risky country and a home country or
the rest of the world r-r gt0. -
- General Political Risk the expected returns of
all investments in that country will be lower. - Selective Political Risk the lower expected
returns to capital pertain only to direct foreign
investment and not to local investors.
3Deviations From Uncovered Interest Parity
- In moving from real interest rates to nominal
interest rates, the deviations from real interest
parity identified above result in ex ante
deviations from uncovered interest parity.
4Deviations From Covered Interest Parity
- The deviations from real interest parity and
uncovered interest parity attributed to political
risk also in deviations from covered interest
parity when the interest rates compared are for
instruments in different political jurisdictions. - The deviations from covered interest parity
represent a political risk premium.
5Exchange Risk VS Political Risk
- Similarity both may explain the interest
parities between countries. - Differences exchange risk relates to the
currency of denomination for claims, where as
political risk relates to the jurisdiction in
which an investment is made and is separate from
the currency denomination. - Although the interest differential for political
risk is intuitive for financial instruments,
political risk for multinational corporations
should be viewed as industry-specific,
firm-specific, or even home-country specific, and
therefore additional analysis will be required
for non-financial assets.
6Political Risk Assessment
-
- General Macro-Political Risk for
Host-country commercial assessment firms that
formulate indexes of political risk. But the
index is usually a measure of the entire business
climate, rather than just the political
environment. -
- Home-country Specific Political Factors
these represent actions by the home country, and
actions by the host country directed specifically
at the home country. Here it is important to look
at trade climates, investment attitudes, and the
potential for an embargo or forced divestment. -
- Micro Industry, Firm and Project-specific
Political Risk Schmidt (1986) model-look at
specific industry relative to others and gain
some general understanding of their comparative
political risk. Then should also analyze
competing firms to gain a deeper understanding of
their own firms political risk within that
industry. - The objective is to generate estimates of
the probabilities of different political risks.
There are many models available Kobrin, Blank,
and LaPalombara (1980), or Torre and Neckar
(1988).
7Capital Budgeting Analysis
- When political risk is introduced into the
evaluation of an investment project, managers are
required to adjust the capital budgeting analysis
somehow to arrive at present value estimates that
reflect the political risks involved. The
preferred approach is to alter the expected cash
flows to take account of the probabilities of
political interventions.
81. Analysis of Potential Expropriation Without
Compensation
- Consider Belmont Enterprises, a multinational
coffee broker involved in all phases of coffee
production from growing the beans to roasting
them and distributing a ground product to
specialty coffee shops all over the world. It is
looking at a new investment in a bean-processing
plant in a Latin American country with the
following cash flows (They think that
expropriation without any government compensation
is the biggest concern, and they assess the
probability of expropriation to be 25 in each of
the next two years. And the all-equity cost of
capital for the project is assumed to be 20) -
EPV 250,000(.75)(200,000)/(1.20)(.75)(.75)(3
00,000)/(1.20)2 -7,812.50
9Method 2
- Look at the present value of the cash flow in
each possible outcome, and determine the
probability associated with that outcome. The
analysts would then take the products of each
probability and present value of cash flow and
sum them to get the expected present value of the
project. Taking the product of the probability of
the outcome and the present value of the cash
flow if that outcome occurs, the expected present
value is again -7,812.50
10Method 3 Break-Even Probabilities
- The break-even value for p can be determined by
setting the expected present value to zero. If
the probability of intervention is judged to be
less than the break-even value, the firm then
expects the project to be profitable - p(-250,000) (1-p)p(-83,333) (1-p)(1-p)(125,000)
0, solving for p0.2338 if Belmont estimates
that the probability of expropriation exceeds
0.2338, it should not undertake the project.
11Notes For These Models
- This model only incorporates the level of the
probability of intervention. A more complex
analysis would account for uncertainty in the
estimate of the probability as well. - This method can be extended to any type of
political risk potential exchange controls,
increased taxation or regulation, and so on - This method can also be carried over to home
actions. For example, rather than analyzing the
probability of expropriation, we can analyze the
probability of forced divestment.
12Analysis of Potential Nationalization With
Compensation
- Returning to the previous example, Belmont
enterprises estimates that if nationalization
occurs, the government will compensate the firm
with 100,000. EPV26,041.67 but note that the
project is profitable only if there is no
nationalization. Other forms of compensation can
be incorporated into the analysis, for instance,
insurance on the subsidiary may pay for part of
the loss. In addition, indirect compensation
through managerial contracts. also home country
tax laws may provide tax deduction associated
with extraordinary losses. Finally, the parent
may reduce its own liabilities associated with
the project through extensive foreign borrowing.
13Tree Diagram of Potential Nationalization With
Compensation
- EPV is positive, the firm is likely to undertake
this project.
14Managing Political Risk
- Purchasing insurance through one of the various
political risk insurance programs. - Alter the structure of investment to alter the
benefits of host-country intervention.
Centralization-versus-Decentralization As
described earlier, a large part of the political
risk involved with non-financial assets is
industry-specific, firm-specific, or home-country
specific. Multinationals must therefore analyze
more political risk than is reflected in any
simple interest differential. While interest
differentials hold in the aggregate, there will
likely be wide project-specific variation. As a
practical matter, the countries which concern us
the most with respect to political risk generally
do not have developed financial markets or market
interest rates anyway. Centralized capital
budgeting is, therefore, usually more
appropriate. Also may alter the investment
timing. - Borrow extensively in the local currency. Now a
component of the debt denomination decision
pertains to political risk. While outright
default is rare, it is at least a possibility. If
the country nationalizes the subsidiary, it also
nationalizes debt. - Entering into joint venture with local partners,
especially with government-owned companies can
reduce political risk such as Morgan Stanley in
China.
15Managing Political Incidents
- When a host country increases regulation of
foreign investment, at least three options exist
ex post. - 1. Simply following the law and altering
operations accordingly is a first option. - 2. Because, obeying a host-countrys
regulations may have hidden consequences if
following the regulation affects the way the host
country and other governments view the company.
The company may set precedents that other
governments will use to regulate other
subsidiaries. Years later, the same host country
may even perceive that it can successfully change
the rules again given the companys earlier
response. Therefore, some companies may consider
discontinuing its operations. -
- 3. negotiate a settlement, or at least open
dialogue with the government. A government
generally will lose more than it gains if a
company leaves the country. (Depending the
relative bargaining power)