Title: Multinational Financial Management Alan Shapiro 7th Edition J.Wiley
1Multinational Financial Management Alan
Shapiro7th Edition J.Wiley Sons
- Power Points by
- Joseph F. Greco, Ph.D.
- California State University, Fullerton
2CHAPTER 11
- MEASURING AND MANAGING ECONOMIC EXPOSURE
3CHAPTER OVERVIEW
- I. FOREIGN EXCHANGE RISK AND ECONOMIC EXPOSURE
- II. THE ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES OF EXCHANGE RATE
CHANGES - III. IDENTIFYING ECONOMIC EXPOSURE
- IV. CALCULATING ECONOMIC EXPOSURE
- V. AN OPERATIONAL MEASURE OF EXCHANGE RISK
- VI. MANAGING OPERATING EXPOSURE
4PART I.FOREIGN EXCHANGE RISK AND ECONOMIC
EXPOSURE
- I. FOREIGN EXCHANGE RISK
- A. Economic exposure
- focuses on the impact of currency
- fluctuations on firms value.
- 1 . Expectations about the fluctuation
must be incorporated in all basic - decisions of the firm.
5FOREIGN EXCHANGE RISK AND ECONOMIC EXPOSURE
- 2. Definitions
- a. Accounting exposure
- impact on firms balance sheet
- b. Economic exposure
- 1.) Transaction
- 2.) Operating
6FOREIGN EXCHANGE RISK AND ECONOMIC EXPOSURE
7FOREIGN EXCHANGE RISK AND ECONOMIC EXPOSURE
- B. Real Exchange Rates and Risk
- 1. Nominal v. real exchange rates
- the real rate has been adjusted for price
changes. -
8FOREIGN EXCHANGE RISK AND ECONOMIC EXPOSURE
- 3. SUMMARY
- a. the economic impact of a currency
change depends on the offset by the difference
in inflation rates or the real exchange rate. - b. It is the relative price changes that
ultimately determine a firms long-run
exposure.
9PART II. THE ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES OF EXCHANGE
RATE CHANGES
- II. ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES
- A. Transaction exposure
- 1. On-balance sheet
- 2. Off-balance sheet
-
10THE ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES OF EXCHANGE RATE
CHANGES
- II. ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES (cont)
- B. Operating Exposure real rate change
- 1. Pricing flexibility is key
- 2. Product differentiation
- 3. Substitution of inputs
11THE ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES OF EXCHANGE RATE
CHANGES
- II. SUMMARY
- The sector of the economy in which the
- firm operates
- the sources of the firms inputs
- and
- fluctuations in the real exchange rate
- delineate the firms true economic
- exposure.
12PART III. IDENTIFYING ECONOMIC EXPOSURE
- III. CASE STUDIES OF ECONOMIC EXPOSURE
- A. ASPEN SKIING COMPANY
- 1. Firms exchange rate risk affected its
sales revenues. -
13IDENTIFYING ECONOMIC EXPOSURE
- A. ASPEN SKIING COMPANY (cont)
- 2. Although there was no translation
- risk, the global market with its exchange
rate risk and its competitors impacted market
demand.
14IDENTIFYING ECONOMIC EXPOSURE
- B. PETROLEOS MEXICANOS (PEMEX)
- 1. The firms exchange rate risk
- affected cost but not revenues.
- 2. Economic impact
- a. Revenues none
- b. Costs decreased
- c. Net effect increased US flows
-
15IDENTIFYING ECONOMIC EXPOSURE
- C. TOYOTA MOTOR COMPANY
- 1. Exchange rate risk affected BOTH
- revenues and costs.
- 2. Flow back effect
- previously exported goods return
- with increased domestic competition.
- 3. Lower profit margins domestically
16PART IV. CALCULATING ECONOMIC EXPOSURE
- IV. A quantitative assessment of economic
- exposure depends on underlying assumptions
concerning - A. future cash flows
- B. sensitivity to exchange rate
- changes.
17PART V. AN OPERATIONAL MEASURE OF EXCHANGE RISK
- V. NEED FOR A WORKABLE APPROACH
- A. Regression Analysis
- 1. Variables
- a. Independent
- changes in parents cash flows
- b. Dependent
- Average nominal exchange rate change.
-
18AN OPERATIONAL MEASURE OF EXCHANGE RISK
- B. REGRESSION EQUATION
- -approach based on the operational definition
of the exchange risk faced by a parent or one of
its affiliates - -a company faces exchange risk to the extent
that variations in the dollar value of the units
cash flows are correlated with variations in the
nominal exchange rate -
19AN OPERATIONAL MEASURE OF EXCHANGE RISK
- where CFt CFt - CFt-1 and
- CFt is the dollar value of total
affiliate(parent)cash flows in period t - EXCHt EXCHt - EXCHt-1 equals the
average nominal exchange rate during
period t - u a random error term
-
-
20AN OPERATIONAL MEASURE OF EXCHANGE RISK
- 1. Output measures
- a. Beta coefficient (b)
- measures the association of changes in cash
flows to exchange rate changes. -
21AN OPERATIONAL MEASURE OF EXCHANGE RISK
- b. the higher the percentage change of cash
flow to changes in exchange rates, the
greater the economic exposure (higher beta
values).
22AN OPERATIONAL MEASURE OF EXCHANGE RISK
- VI. SUMMARY
- A. The focus of the accounting profession
on the balance sheet impact of currency
changes has led to ignoring the important
impact on future cash flows. -
23AN OPERATIONAL MEASURE OF EXCHANGE RISK
- B. For firms incurring costs and selling
products in foreign countries, the net effect
of currency changes may be less important in the
long run.
24AN OPERATIONAL MEASURE OF EXCHANGE RISK
- C. To measure exposure properly, you must
focus on inflation-adjusted or real exchange
rates instead of nominal or actual exchange
rates.
25AN OPERATIONAL MEASURE OF EXCHANGE RISK
- D. It is difficult in practice to determine
what the actual economic impact of a currency
change will be.
26PART VI. MANAGING OPERATING EXPOSURE
- I. INTRODUCTION
- Operating exposure management requires
- long-term operating adjustments.
- A. Real v. Nominal Changes
- 1. Relative price changes
- leads to marketing and/or
- production revisions
27MANAGING OPERATING EXPOSURE
- B. Proactive Marketing and Production
- Initiatives
- 1. Marketing
- market selection
- product strategy
- pricing strategy
- promotional strategy
28MANAGING OPERATING EXPOSURE
- B. Proactive Marketing and Production
- Initiatives (cont)
- 2. Production
- product sourcing
- input mix
- plant location
- raising productivity
29MANAGING OPERATING EXPOSURE
- II. Marketing Management Adjustments
- A. Market Selection
- 1. use advantage to carve out market share
- 2. Market segmentation
30MANAGING OPERATING EXPOSURE
- B. Pricing strategy Expectations critical
- 1. If HC value falls, exporter gains
- competitive advantage by increasing unit
profitability and market share. - 2. The higher price elasticity of demand,
the more currency risk - the firm faces by product substitution.
31MANAGING OPERATING EXPOSURE
- 3. Following HC depreciation, local
- firm may have much more freedom in its
pricing. - C. Promotional Strategy
-
32MANAGING OPERATING EXPOSURE
- D. Product Strategy
- exchange rate changes may alter
- 1. The timing of new product introductions,
- 2. Product deletion ,
- 3. Product innovation.
33 MANAGING OPERATING EXPOSURE
- III. Product Management Adjustments
- product sourcing and plant location are the
principal variables to manipulate. - A. Input mix
- B. Shift production among plants
- C. Plant location
- D. Raising productivity
34MANAGING OPERATING EXPOSURE
- IV. Planning For Exchange-Rate Changes
- A. With better planning and more
competitive options, firms can change
strategies substantially - B. before the impact of an currency change
makes itself felt. - C. Implication compaction of adjustment
period following an exchange-rate change.
35MANAGING OPERATING EXPOSURE
- V. Financial Management of Exchange Rate Risk
Financial managers Role in Marketing and
Production - A. Provide local manager with fore-
- casts of inflation and exchange-
- rate changes.
- B. Identify and focus on competitive
exposure.
36MANAGING OPERATING EXPOSURE
- C. Design the evaluation criteria so that
operating managers neither - rewarded or penalized for
- unexpected exchange-rate
- changes.
- D. Estimate and hedge the operating
- exposure after adjustments made.