310 likes | 545 Views
International Business 10e Daniels/Radebaugh/Sullivan. International Business. Foreign Exchange: Dealing with Currencies with a basic introduction to the International Monetary System . 2004 Prentice Hall, Inc. 9-1. Foreign Exchange Terms.
E N D
International Business 10e Daniels/Radebaugh/Sullivan International Business Foreign Exchange: Dealing with Currencies with a basic introduction to the International Monetary System 2004 Prentice Hall, Inc 9-1
Foreign Exchange Terms • Foreign exchange: money denominated in the currency of another nation or group of nations • Cash • Credit • Bank deposits • Other short-term claims (e.g., bonds) • Exchange rate: the price of a particular currency relative to another
What you need to know … • What is money? • Why and when do businesspeople deal with foreign money? • How should you convert money from one currency into another? • How are the values of currencies set? • How can you predict when currency values will change?
What is money? • The “medium of exchange” • that is, something widely acceptedas means of payment • Usually, governments declare certain pieces of paper to be money • But people must accept them • Alternatives are inconvenient, but possible • Tobacco in early American colonies • U.S. dollar in Russia when ruble collapsed
Why and when do businesspeople deal with foreign money? • Sell abroad, and you may receive payment in foreign currency • Buy abroad, and you may have to pay in foreign currency • Travel abroad, you must spend foreign currency • A foreign direct investment will have to pay expenses in foreign currency
How should you convert money from one currency into another? • Current values of major foreign currencies are available on the Web • Most businesspeople normally buy from or sell to a bank • The bank often gives less than the rates offered on the Web, but handles all details • Banks may vary a lot in how good a deal they give
A business with significant foreign activity creates a stable relationship with one or a few banks • Negotiating with the bank, it can get good rates on foreign exchange • Nowadays, you can do your own currency trading • You get the rates shown on the Web if you buy/sell $1 million or so
How are the values of currencies set? • There are two basic ways • “Fixed” or “Pegged” exchange rates • Governments decide the value of currency • Example: Hong Kong’s government keeps the value of its dollar at roughly US$0.128 (US$1=HK$7.80) • “Floating” exchange rates • Supply and demand sets values • The value of most major currencies “floats” • Euro, Japanese yen, British pound, etc.
Fixed exchange rates have important benefits • They make business predictable • In some very prosperous periods, most major exchange rates have been fixed • The late 19th century • 1945-1971
But a fixed exchange rate requires discipline in the government – and a willingness to create pain • Example: Suppose your nation’s economy is very prosperous • Your people will have money to buy imports • Their demand for foreign currencies will put upward pressure on their exchange rates • Government has to slowthe domestic economy to prevent change in exchange rate • Higher taxes, higher interest rates, lower spending
Many economists say if a country is having difficulty maintaining a fixed exchange rate, the economy is overheated • They say higher interest rates or higher taxes might be better for the economy in the long runin those circumstances • But politicians don’t like to take pain • U.S. abandoned fixed exchange rates when the Vietnam War created strong inflation
It seems that the more complicated an economy, the more difficult it is to maintain fixed exchange rates • Many small countries succeed • Hong Kong, Bangladesh, Fiji • Few propose them for the largest developed countries today
But China maintains a fixed exchange rate • Its government buys all surplus dollars in the country • In Sept. 2006 China had $987.9 billion US dollars
Most international business involves currencies with floating rates • Buyers and sellers establish prices in markets like those for tea and wheat • $1,200,000,000,000 in foreign exchange is traded every day • US dollar is most widely traded • involved in 90% of all transactions • London is the main foreign-exchange market
Key Foreign-Exchange Terms • Bid: the rate at which traders buy foreign currency • Offer: the rate at which traders sell foreign currency • Spread: the difference between bid and offer rates; the profit margin for the trader 9-6
Market Rhythms 9-13
How can you predict when currency values will change? • Business decisions demand you look far ahead • If exchange rates will change, your whole calculation will be off • Some foreign currencies have lost 90% or more of their value in a year
‘Fundamental analysis’ involves examining basic economic data • How fast are prices rising in the country? • Is there a trade surplus or deficit? • Is the government running budget deficits? How much? • How do interest rates in the countries compare? • How has the government been managing the currency?
Technical analysis involves examining trends in exchange rates • One principle: Trends once established often tend to continue • ‘The trend is your friend’ • But if “everyone” agrees something will happen, it may not happen • When ‘everyone’ thinks the dollar will go down, ‘everyone’ has already sold dollars • If the news changes, many may quickly change their minds and want to buy
Foreign exchange can be the difference between profit and loss • HSBC Bank in Argentina • They entered Argentina at a time when it appeared the government was starting to manage the economy effectively • But they continued investing as government became more irresponsible • They lost big
Foreign-Exchange Instruments • Spot transactions: involve the exchange of currency the second day after the date on which the two foreign-exchange traders agree • Outright forward transactions: involve the exchange of currency 3 or more days after the date the traders agree • FX swap: involves a swap of one currency for another and then swapped back on a future date 9-5
Choosing a Foreign-Exchange Trader • Capability to handle major currencies • Capability to handle major cross-trades • Capability to handle specific currencies • Capability to handle derivatives (forwards, swaps, and options) • Capability to engage in research • Ranking in specific locations • Large international banks will use multiple foreign-exchange traders depending upon their expertise in particular areas 9-15
Foreign-Exchange Convertibility • Fully convertible currencies are those that the government allows both residents and nonresidents to purchase in unlimited amounts • “Hard currencies” are fully convertible • “Soft currencies” (or weak currencies) are not fully convertible • Typically from developing countries • Known as “exotic currencies” 9-10