International finance is the branch of economics
that studies the dynamics of exchange rates, foreign investment, and how these
affect international trade. 2) Fundamentals of international finance
deal with the study of foreign investments,
the changes in the foreign exchange rates, and how international trade
is influenced by them. 3) International finance also follows
techniques for allocation of funds and resources in international trade.
However, it faces certain hindrances regarding mobility of capital and foreign
currencies, as well as the foreign exchange rates prevalent in different
countries. 4) The Specialty of International finance are Foreign exchange risk: E.g., an unexpected devaluation adversely
affects your export market Political
risk:
The Scope of International Finance :
Currently, international finance has
become more comprehensive or broader in scope and is dealing with matters
related to globalization, fair trade, multinational banking, and multinational
corporations. Three conceptually distinct but interrelated parts are identifiable in international finance:
International
Financial Economics: concerned with causes and effects of financial flows among
nations - application of macroeconomic theory and policy to the global economy.
International
Financial Management: concerned with how individual economic units, especially mncs,
cope with the complex financial environment of international business. Focuses
on issues most relevant for making sound business decision in a global economy.
International
Financial Markets: concerned with international financial/investment
instruments, foreign exchange markets, international banking, international
securities markets, financial derivatives etc…
o
Balance of Payments: Meaning: It is
a systematic accounting record of all economic transactions during a given
period of time between the residents of one country and the residents of all
other countries. The word economic transaction means transfer of economic value
from one country to another. The transfer may be requited i.e. The transferee
gives something in return or unrequited like unilateral transfers or gifts.
Example: purchase or sale of goods or services with a financial quid pro quo –
cash or a promise to pay. This involves one real and one economic transaction.
Deficit and surplus in BOP: If debits
exceed credits then it is BOP deficit and if the credits exceed debits then it
is said to be BOP surplus.
o
The
three main components of BOP are
•
The
current account:
this includes export and import of goods and services and unilateral transfers
of goods and services. The current account is further divided into
o
Merchandise which takes care of the physical
goods,
o
The
Non Monetary Gold Movements (gold is both a commodity and a
financial asset. It is a financial asset when the monitory authority holds it
as part of international reserves. Otherwise it is a commodity asset).
o
The
last is the Invisible account, which includes trade in services such as
banking, insurance, transportation, travel etc.
•
The
capital account:
this includes transactions leading to changes in financial assets and
liabilities of the country. The further classification is
o
Private
sector capital flows and advances,
o
Banking
transactions and
o
Official
loans, amortization etc.
•
The
reserve account:
this account includes the reserve assets i.e. The assets that the monitory
authority of the country uses to settle the deficits that arise on the other two
categories taken together.
§
Importance
of BOP information: The BOP statement contains useful information for financial
decision makers. In the short run, BOP deficit or surpluses may have an
immediate impact on the exchange rate. Basically, BOP records all transactions
that create demand for and supply of a currency. When exchange rates are market
determined, BOP figures indicate excess demand or supply for the currency and
the possible impact on the exchange rate. Taken in conjunction with recent past
data, they may conform or indicate a reversal of perceived trends. They also
signal a policy shift on the part of the monetary authorities of the country
unilaterally or in concert with its trading partners. For instance, a country
facing a current account deficit may raise interest to attract short term
capital inflows to prevent depreciation of its currency. Countries suffering
from chronic deficits may find their credit ratings being downgraded because
the markets interpret the data as evidence that the country may have
difficulties its debt.
Credits
|
Debits
|
Current Account
|
|
Merchandise
Exports (Sale of Goods)
|
Merchandise
Imports (purchase of Goods)
|
Invisible Exports
(Sale of Services)
|
Invisible Imports
(Purchase of Services)
|
Transport
services sold abroad
|
Transport
services purchased from abroad
|
Insurance
services sold abroad
|
Insurance
services purchased
|
Foreign tourist
expenditure in country
|
Tourist
expenditure abroad
|
Other services
sold abroad
|
Other services
purchased from abroad
|
Incomes received
on loans and investments abroad.
|
Income paid on
loans and investments in the home country.
|
Unilateral
Transfers
|
Unilateral
Transfers
|
Private
remittances received from abroad
|
Private
remittances abroad
|
Pension payments
received from abroad
|
Pension payments
abroad
|
Government grants
received from abroad
|
Government grants
abroad.
|
Capital Account
|
|
Foreign long-term
investments in the home country (less redemptions and repayments)
|
Long-term
investments abroad (less redemptions and repayments)
|
Direct
investments in the home country
|
Direct
Investments abroad
|
Foreign
investments in domestic securities
|
Investments in
foreign securities
|
Other investments
of foreigners in the home country
|
Other investments
abroad
|
Foreign
Governments’ loans to the home country.
|
Government loans
to foreign countries
|
Foreign
short-term investments in the home country.
|
Short-term
investments abroad.
|
•
An exchange rate is the price of one currency in
terms of another. This is sometimes
called the nominal exchange rate
. Each country has a currency in which
the prices of goods and services are quoted. FX rates express the value of one currency in
terms of another currency. An exchange rate is the price of one
currency in terms of another. This is
sometimes called the nominal exchange rate
•
An exchange rate can be quoted in two ways, Direct
(American) terms and indirect (European) terms
o Direct
terms : Price of foreign currency in
terms of national currency. How many
units of national currency do we need to buy a unit of foreign currency Example
$/€, $/¥.
o Indirect
terms : Price of national currency in terms of foreign currency How many units
of foreign currency do we need to buy a unit of national currency Example €/$,
¥/$
} Players
in the foreign exchange market
◦ Commercial
banks, large corporations, non-bank financial institutions, central banks. Commercial banks are by far the largest
players in the foreign exchange market.
However large corporations like IBM and GE also engage in significant
transactions. Another groups of
important players are central banks
} Characteristics
of the market
◦ The
main markets are London, New York, Tokyo
◦ Daily
global value of forex trading $1.7 trillion
◦ $
vehicle currency
} What
factors might affect demand and supply?
◦ Inflation
rates?
◦ Trade
deficits?
◦ Demand
for assets?
•
The
'spot' and 'forward' contracts are the most basics tools of Foreign exchange
Management. These are contracts between end users (exporters, importers etc.)
And financial institutions that specify the terms of an exchange of two
currencies. In any foreign exchange contract the following have to be agreed
upon: 1) The currencies to be bought and
sold - in every contract there are two currencies. One that is bought and the
one that is sold. 2) The amount of
currency to be bought or sold
3) The date at which the contract matures 4) The rate at which the exchange of currencies will occur. In determining the rate of exchange in six months time there are two components: 1) The current spot rate 2) The forward rate adjustment The spot rate is simply the current market rate as determined by supply and demand. The forward rate adjustment is a slightly more complicated calculation that involves the interest rates of the currencies involved.
3) The date at which the contract matures 4) The rate at which the exchange of currencies will occur. In determining the rate of exchange in six months time there are two components: 1) The current spot rate 2) The forward rate adjustment The spot rate is simply the current market rate as determined by supply and demand. The forward rate adjustment is a slightly more complicated calculation that involves the interest rates of the currencies involved.
Vehicle
currency (2004){06,07}: The currency used to
invoice an international trade transaction, especially when it is not the
national currency of either the importer or the exporter. At the start of every
trading day, the external value of domestic currency gets established in the
local foreign exchange market against a major currency. This currency of
universally accepted major international currencies like USD, GBP or EUR. Such
currency is called vehicle currency. In india from 1991, USD is vehicle
currency.
·
Triangular
arbitrage is the process of trading out of the U.S.
dollar into a second currency, then trading it for a third currency, which is
in turn traded for U.S. dollars. The
purpose is to earn an arbitrage profit via trading from the second to the third
currency when the direct exchange between the two is not in alignment with the
cross exchange rate.
·
Currency
Codes : All currencies have a 3-letter code used by SWIFT for all interbank
transactions.
o
DEM
: Deutsche Mark
o
CHF
: Swiss Franc
o
NLG
: Dutch Guilder
o
BEF
: Belgian Franc
o
FRF
: French Franc
o
DKK
: Danish Kroner
o
ESP
: Spanish Peseta
o
ITL
: Italian Lira
o
USD
: US Dollar
o
AUD
: Australian Dollar
o
CAD
: Canadian Dollar
o
JPY
: Japanese Yen
o
GBP
: British Pound
o
IEP
: Irish Pound (punt)
o
INR
: Indian Rupee
o
SAR
: Saudi Riyal
o
EUR
: Euro
•
A
spread can be defined as an option trading strategy, in which a trader offsets
the purchase of one trading unit against another. It can also be referred to as
the gap or difference between the bid and ask of a financial instrument.
Interbank market deals are conducted mainly over the telephone. If the price
quoted is acceptable, then the deal between traders will move further in terms
of amount bought/sold, price, identity of the party etc. In their respective
banks’ computerised record systems. On the day of settlement, banks will settle
the transaction with both the sides.
•
Classification
of rates in terms of settlement (cash, tom, spot and forward),
•
Where T
represents the current day when trading takes place and n represents number of
days.
•
Cash – Cash rate or Ready rate
is the rate when the exchange of currencies takes place on the date of the deal
itself. There is no delay in payment at all, therefore represented by T + 0.
When the delivery is made on the day of the contract is booked, it is called a
Telegraphic Transfer or cash or value – day deal.
•
Tom – It stands for tomorrow
rate, which indicates that the exchange of currencies takes place on the next
working day after the date of the deal, and therefore represented by T+ 1.
•
Spot – When the exchange of
currencies takes place on the second day after the date of the deal (T+2), it
is called as spot rate. The spot rate is the rate quoted for current foreign –
currency transactions. It applies to interbank transactions that require
delivery on the purchased currency within two business days in exchange for
immediate cash payment for that currency.
•
For e. G. A
London bank sells yen against dollar to a Paris bank on Monday, 1st
march, the London bank will turn over yen deposit in Japan to the Paris bank on
Wednesday and the Paris bank will turn over $
deposit in US to the London bank on
same day i. E. 3rd march, Wednesday. If the 3rd
march is holiday in any bank in dealing location or settlement location deposit
will takes place on next business day.
•
Forward –The forward rate is a
contractual rate between a foreign – exchange trader and the trader’s client
for delivery of foreign currency sometime in the future. Here rate of transaction
is fixed on transaction date for transactions in future. Standard forward
contract maturities are 1,2,3,6, 9, and 12 months.
o
Bid rate: The bid rate denotes
the number of units of a currency a bank is willing to pay when it buys another
currency.
o
Offer rate: The offer rate
denotes the number of units of a currency a bank will want to be paid when it
sells a currency
Bid offer spread: The difference between the ask
and bid rates.
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