welcome to class of international finance/forces by dr. satyendra singh university of winnipeg...

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Welcome to class of International Financial Forces & Finance Management Dr. Satyendra Singh Professor, Marketing and International Business University of Winnipeg Canada [email protected] http://abem.uwinnipeg.ca www.abem.ca/conference

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Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada. Outline. Purchasing Power Parity Factors affecting Foreign currency Fisher’s Effect Arbitrage Hedge (Forward, Currency option, Money Market) Transfer Pricing - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Welcome to class of

International Financial Forces &Finance Management

Dr. Satyendra SinghProfessor, Marketing and International Business

University of WinnipegCanada

[email protected] http://abem.uwinnipeg.ca

www.abem.ca/conference

Page 2: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Outline• Purchasing Power Parity• Factors affecting Foreign currency• Fisher’s Effect• Arbitrage• Hedge (Forward, Currency option, Money Market)• Transfer Pricing• Swap (Parallel loan, Bank, Currency)• Debt vs. Equity• Impact of Culture on Accounting• Accounting Standards

Page 3: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Purchasing Power Parity (PPP)…

– The number of units of a currency required to buy the same amount of goods and services in a domestic market that $1.00 would buy in the U.S.

– Helps to make comparisons possible across economies

CIA Fact Book

Page 4: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Purchasing Power Parity (PPP)If,1 Lt. Milk US $1.001 Lt. Milk India Rs. 20.00

Then, PPP: US $1 = Rs. 20

Reality: US $1 = Rs. 40

ie Rs. Is 50% undervalued –artificially?!

Page 5: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Factors affecting Foreign Currency• Three factors:

– Inflation– Interest rate– Speculation

• Fisher’s Effect– Diff. in interest rate may determine strength of FOREX

€ 1 = $1.5,Interest rate: € (3%) and $(5%)

Speculation: Which currency becomes weaker/stronger?

Page 6: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Inflation and the International Company.. High inflation rates Make capital expenditure planning more difficult Cause the cost of goods and services to rise Tend to cause BOP deficits Could lead to more restrictive fiscal or monetary policies, currency controls, export

incentives, and import obstacles Encourage borrowing because the loan will be repaid with cheaper money Bring high interest rates Discourage lending Make capital expenditure planning more difficult

Page 7: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Atlas Conversion Factor

• It is used for speculation

Average of FOREX for the last 2 years adjusted by the ratio of domestic inflation and combined inflation of US, UK, EU and Japan

Page 8: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Weak Foreign Currency…

Page 9: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Weak Foreign Currency…

Page 10: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Weak Foreign Currency… (thousand)

Page 11: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Weak Foreign Currency… (million)

Page 12: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Weak Foreign Currency (billion)

Page 13: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Weak Foreign Currency (trillion)

Page 14: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

No Foreign Currency

Page 15: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Border: Rwanda and Burundi

Page 16: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Foreign Exchange Office in Africa

Page 17: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Arbitrage: The process of buying and selling instantaneously to make profit at no risk

AlgeriaDinar

BrazilRiel

ChilePeso

1:21:3

1:5

5 dinar

Page 18: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Movement of $, Transfer Pricing

Supplier

Local business

Customer

Profit

$1

$10

$9

Say, 30% tax$6.30 Net profit$2.70 tax

Page 19: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Movement of $, Transfer Pricing

Supplier

Local business

Customer

Foreign

$1

$10

$8

Now profit $1Say, 30% tax33 Cents tax!

$9

Page 20: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Movement of $, Transfer Pricing – 3 countries

UK OFC: Jamaica USA

$100 to produceSells at $110 Sells at $210 Sells at $220Profit $10 Profit $100 Profit $10Tax 50% Tax 5% Tax 30%Tax paid $5 Tax paid $5 Tax paid $3.33

Page 21: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

OFC: Offshore Ffinancial Centres

Offshore financial center specializes in financing nonresidents, low taxes and few banking regulations Too small to exist on its own Boosts economy Employment

Switzerland Cayman Island Hong Kong Bahamas Bermuda Gibraltar Luxemburg …

Page 22: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Transaction Exposure: Hedging Hedging process to reduce or eliminate financial risk

Forward market hedge Foreign currency contract sold or bought forward in order to protect against foreign currency

movement Currency option hedge Option to buy or sell specific amount of foreign currency at specific time to protect against foreign

currency risk Money market hedge Method to hedge foreign currency exposure by borrowing and lending in domestic and foreign

money markets

Page 23: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Forward Hedge• Hedge is a process to reduce risk

€ 1 = $1.5 (now/spot) $ is expected to be weak € 1 = $1.6 (speculate/forward)Interest rate: € (3%) and $(5%)

Suppose you have accounts receivables for €20,000If quoted in €, supplier may not have problemBut strong currency is desirable by both seller and buyerIf you quoted in € (ie € 20,000 x 1.5 = $30,000),You now get $ (ie € 20,000 x 1.6 = $32,000)You gained: $2000, because $ became weakYou lose, if $ became stronger (say 1.4) = $2,000

Page 24: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Currency Option Hedge

• So you have accounts receivables in a currency that works best for your company

• Firms may have bank accounts in multiple currencies such as Dollar, Euro, Yen… to avoid conversion charges.

Page 25: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Money Market Hedge• Counter balancing the risk by borrowing the same amount

for FOREX (A/R) in domestic market and investing it until accounts receivables are received

Suppose the AR is €20,000 (in 90 days)€ 1 = $1.4 (expected) $ is expected to be strong! € 1 = $1.5 (now)Interest rate: € (5%) and $(3%)

Borrow €20,000 convert in $ (€ 20,000 x 1.5 = $30,000) Invest Income (but pay interest)

After 90 days, pay €20,000 to local bank, so no debtSo, Investment + income - interest ≥ €20,000

Page 26: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Source: Wall Street Journal, Exchange rate June 19, 2006

Fri: June 16 (LAST)Mon: June 19 (SPOT)Last Friday

Page 27: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Swaps

Parallel Loans Matched loans across currencies made to cover

risk Bank Swap

Swap made between banks to acquire temporary foreign currencies

Currency Swap Exchange of debt service of loan or bond in one

currency for debt service of loan or bond in another currency

Page 28: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Parallel Loan Swap

CANADA: Canada (parent) India (child)

INDIA: Canada (child) India (parent)

$1m

Rs. 40m

$1 = Rs. 40

Page 29: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Bank Swap

Canadian Bank in Canada

Indian Bank in India Canadian child in India

Canadian parent in Canada$1m

Rs. 40m

Canadian Parent deposits $1m to the credit of the Indian BankThe Correspondent Indian Bank lends Rs. 40m (spot rate) to the ChildAt a later agreed date, the Child returns Rs. 40m to Indian BankIndian Bank instructs the Canadian Bank to pay $1m to the Parent

So, no conversion of $1 to Rs. Useful if you want hard currency only

Page 30: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Correspondent Bank

Page 31: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Currency SwapCANADA CYPRUSI am Known here Same is true for So the interest rate is low for me the Cypriot

person in Cyprus

So, I take the loan for the Cypriot guy Person does the In Canada at low interest rate same for me in $1.5m Cyprus (€ 1m)

Then, we swap currency,i.e., I service the loan in € for the Cypriot guy in CYPRUSAnd the Cypriot guy services my loan in $ in Canada

€ 1 = $1.5

Page 32: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Capital Structure of a Firm

Debt Borrow from Bank Conservative, report less, ↓ tax exposure, ↑ dividend

pay out save $ to service debt France, Germany, Japan, some Emerging Markets

Debt financing is less expensive than equity financing, because interest paid on debt is tax deductible, but dividends paid out to shareholders are not.

Equity Shares, Bonds Impressive (Inflated report) to attract investors Value of Bond ↓, if interest rate ↑

Page 33: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

How do Bonds perform?

Suppose, now you have bonds worth$10,000 @5% for a year

So expect $500 at the end of the year

Now, interest rate changed to 6%

Value of your bond now is: $x x.06 = $500ie x = $8334

Drop in value = 17%!

Page 34: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Cultural Differences in Measurement and Disclosure for Accounting Systems

Page 35: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Annual Reports

Depends Calculation of Inventory Depreciation Income only when contract is complete Valuation of assets Goodwill …

So we need uniform accounting system

Page 36: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

International Accounting Standards

• Triple Bottom Line Standard (3BL)– Environmental, social, and financial impacts of the business

• International Accounting Standards Board (IASB)• International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS)• Sarbans-Oxley Act (2002, US)

– Public Company Accounting Reform and Investor Protection Act (in the Senate)

– Corporate and Auditing Accountability and Responsibility Act (in the House)

– Heavy penalty for corporate finance fraud

Page 37: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Use of International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS)

Page 38: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Tax System

• Direct Tax– Income Tax– VAT – Value Added Tax

• Indirect Tax (Withholding Tax)– Dividend– Interest– Royalty

Page 39: Welcome to class of International Finance/Forces by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada

Corporate Tax Rates