International Financial Management

Höfundur Geert Bekaert; Robert Hodrick

Útgefandi Cambridge University Press

Snið ePub

Print ISBN 9781107111820

Útgáfa 3

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9.890 kr.

Description

Efnisyfirlit

  • Cover
  • Half title
  • Title page
  • Imprints page
  • Contents
  • Preface
  • This Book’s Approach: Making Better Decisions by Blending Theory and Practice with Real-World Data Analysis
  • Pedagogy for Students
  • Acknowledgments
  • 1 Globalization and the Multinational Corporation
  • 1.1 Introduction
  • 1.2 Globalization and the Growth of International Trade and Capital Flows
  • The Growth of International Trade
  • Trade Liberalization
  • International Efforts to Promote Free Trade
  • The Growth in Trade
  • How Multinational Corporations Are Affecting Trade
  • The Globalization of Financial Markets
  • Trends in Financial Openness
  • The New Financial Landscape
  • A Global Financial Crisis
  • Ramifications of the Crisis
  • 1.3 Multinational Corporations
  • How Multinational Corporations Enter Foreign Markets
  • The Goals of an MNC
  • The Investment Time Horizon
  • The Stakeholder Alternative
  • Agency Theory and Corporate Governance
  • Corporate Scandals
  • Corporate Governance Around the World
  • An Independent Board of Directors
  • Concentrated Ownership
  • Executive Compensation
  • Shareholder Activism and Litigation
  • Hostile Takeovers
  • The Sarbanes-Oxley Act
  • What the Data Show
  • Multinational Corporations and Foreign Direct Investment
  • International Mergers and Acquisitions
  • 1.4 Other Important International Players
  • International Banks
  • International Institutions
  • The International Monetary Fund
  • The World Bank
  • Multilateral Development Banks
  • The World Trade Organization
  • The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
  • The Bank for International Settlements
  • The European Union
  • Governments
  • Individual and Institutional Investors
  • Individual Investors
  • Institutional Investors
  • Sovereign Wealth Funds
  • Hedge Funds and Private Equity Firms
  • 1.5 Globalization and the Multinational Firm: Benefactor or Menace?
  • A Rocky Road to Free Trade
  • Trade Openness and Economic Risk
  • Fairer Trade Openness?
  • Do International Capital Flows Cause Havoc?
  • Benefits of Financial Openness
  • Costs of Financial Globalization
  • What the Data Show
  • The Anti-Globalist Movement and MNCs
  • What Are Anti-Globalists?
  • Why Do Anti-Globalists Dislike Multinationals So Much?
  • The Economic Effects of FDI and Multinational Activity
  • Some Final Thoughts on Globalization
  • 1.6 Overview of the Book
  • Part I: Introduction to Foreign Exchange Markets and Risks
  • Part II: International Parity Conditions and Exchange Rate Determination
  • Part III: International Capital Markets
  • Part IV: International Corporate Finance
  • Part V: Managing Ongoing Operations
  • Part VI: Foreign Currency Derivatives
  • A Final Introduction
  • 1.7 Summary
  • Questions
  • Problems
  • Bibliography
  • Part I Introduction to Foreign Exchange Markets and Risks
  • 2 The Foreign Exchange Market
  • 2.1 The Organization of the Foreign Exchange Market
  • Size of the Market
  • Types of Contracts Traded
  • Foreign Exchange Dealers
  • Foreign Exchange Brokers
  • Other Participants in the Forex Market
  • Electronic Foreign Exchange Trading (eFX)
  • The Competitive Marketplace
  • 2.2 Currency Quotes and Prices
  • Exchange Rates
  • Exchange Rate Quotes
  • Vehicle Currencies and Currency Cross-Rates
  • Triangular Arbitrage
  • 2.3 Inside the Interbank Market I: Bid–Ask Spreads and Bank Profits
  • Bid–Ask Spreads
  • The Magnitude of Bid–Ask Spreads
  • 2.4 Inside the Interbank Market II: Communications and Fund Transfers
  • Communication Systems
  • Cross-Currency Settlement (or Herstatt) Risk
  • 2.5 Describing Changes in Exchange Rates
  • Rates of Appreciation and Depreciation
  • Continuously Compounded Rates of Appreciation (Advanced)
  • 2.6 Summary
  • Questions
  • Problems
  • Appendix 2.1 Logarithms
  • Bibliography
  • 3 Forward Markets and Transaction Exchange Risk
  • 3.1 Transaction Exchange Risk
  • 3.2 Describing Uncertain Future Exchange Rates
  • Assessing Exchange Rate Uncertainty Using Historical Data
  • The Probability Distribution of Future Exchange Rates
  • Conditional Means and Volatilities
  • Assessing the Likelihood of Particular Future Exchange Rate Ranges
  • 3.3 Hedging Transaction Exchange Risk
  • Forward Contracts and Hedging
  • Hedging Currency Risk of Fancy Foods
  • Hedging at Nancy Foods
  • Exposure of Hedged Versus Unhedged Strategies
  • The Costs and Benefits of a Forward Hedge
  • Examples of Using Forward Contracts to Hedge Transaction Risk
  • 3.4 The Forward Foreign Exchange Market
  • Market Organization
  • Forward Contract Maturities and Value Dates
  • Forward Market Bid–Ask Spreads
  • Liquidity in the Forward Market
  • Net Settlement
  • The Foreign Exchange Swap Market
  • How Swap Prices Are Quoted
  • A Rule for Using Swap Points
  • Cash Flows in a Swap
  • 3.5 Forward Premiums and Discounts
  • Sizes of Forward Premiums or Discounts
  • Forward Premiums and Swap Points
  • 3.6 Changes in Exchange Rate Volatility (Advanced)
  • Volatility Clustering
  • 3.7 Summary
  • Questions
  • Problems
  • Appendix
  • Appendix 3.1 A Statistics Refresher
  • Bibliography
  • 4 The Balance of Payments
  • 4.1 The Balance of Payments: Concepts and Terminology
  • Major Accounts of the BOP
  • A Double-Entry Accounting System
  • An Intuitive Rule for Determining Credits and Debits
  • Current Account Transactions
  • Interest and Dividend Receipts and Payments
  • Transfer Payments Between Countries
  • Capital Account Transactions
  • Capital Outflows
  • Capital Inflows
  • Summarizing Capital Account Transactions
  • Official Reserves Account Transactions
  • Implications for Fixed Exchange Rates
  • 4.2 Surpluses and Deficits in the Balance of Payments Accounts
  • An Important BOP Identity
  • The US Current Account
  • Services
  • Balance on Goods and Services
  • Investment Income
  • Unilateral Current Transfers, Net
  • Balance on Current Account
  • The US Capital and Financial Accounts
  • US-Owned Assets Abroad, Net
  • Foreign Assets in the US, Net
  • Financial Derivatives, Net
  • Capital Account Transfers
  • Balance on the Capital Account
  • The Official Settlements, or Reserves, Account
  • BOP Deficits and Surpluses and the Official Settlements Account
  • BOP Statistics Around the World
  • 4.3 The Dynamics of the BOP
  • The Trade Account and the Investment Income Account
  • Countries as Net Creditors or Net Debtors
  • The US Net International Investment Position
  • 4.4 Savings, Investment, Income, and the BOP
  • Linking the Current Account to National Income
  • National Savings, Investment, and the Current Account
  • Current Accounts and Government Deficits
  • What Causes Current Account Deficits and Surpluses?
  • Ricardian Equivalence
  • Individuals’ Intertemporal Budget Constraints
  • Investment Spending
  • Assessing the Openness of International Capital Markets
  • 4.5 Summary
  • Questions
  • Problems
  • Appendix 4.1 A Primer on National Income and Product Accounts
  • Gross Domestic Production and Expenditures
  • Consumption Expenditures (C)
  • Gross Private Domestic Investment (I)
  • Government Purchases (G)
  • Net Exports (NX)
  • Gross Domestic Product and Expenditures
  • From Gross Domestic Product to Gross National Income
  • Biblography
  • 5 Exchange Rate Systems
  • 5.1 Alternative Exchange Rate Arrangements and Currency Risk
  • Exchange Rate Systems Around the World
  • Floating Currencies
  • Managed Floating
  • Fixed, or Pegged, Currencies
  • No Separate Legal Tender
  • Currency Boards
  • Target Zones and Crawling Pegs
  • Currency Risks in Alternative Exchange Rate Systems
  • Quantifying Currency Risks
  • Currency Risks in Floating Exchange Rate Systems
  • Currency Risk in Target Zones
  • Currency Risk in Pegged Exchange Rate Systems
  • Currency Risk in Currency Boards and Monetary Unions
  • Trends in Currency Systems
  • 5.2 Central Banks
  • The Central Bank’s Balance Sheet
  • Bank Reserves and Currency in Circulation
  • Domestic Credit
  • Official Reserves
  • Money Creation and Inflation
  • The Impossible Trinity or Trilemma
  • Foreign Exchange Interventions
  • Non-Sterilized Interventions
  • Sterilized Interventions
  • How Do Central Banks Peg a Currency?
  • Pegging the Exchange Rate
  • 5.3 Flexible Exchange Rate Systems
  • The Effects of Central Bank Interventions
  • Direct Effects of Interventions
  • Indirect Effects of Interventions
  • Empirical Evidence on the Effectiveness of Interventions
  • 5.4 Fixed Exchange Rate Systems
  • The International Monetary System Before 1971: A Brief History
  • The Gold Standard
  • Hyperinflation and the Interwar Period
  • The Bretton Woods System
  • Individual Incentives Versus Aggregate Incentives
  • Special Drawing Rights
  • Pegged Exchange Rate Systems in Developing Countries
  • Illegal Currency Markets
  • Why Not Simply Float?
  • Currency Boards
  • Dollarization
  • 5.5 Limited-Flexibility Systems: Target Zones and Crawling Pegs
  • Target Zones
  • Speculative Attacks
  • Defending the Target Zone
  • Lead–Lag Operations
  • Crawling Pegs
  • 5.6 How to See an Emu Fly: The Road to Monetary Integration in Europe
  • The European Monetary System
  • Intervention Rules
  • Realignment Rules
  • On ECUs, Euros, and Franken
  • The Politics of Naming the Euro
  • Was the EMS Successful?
  • Day-to-Day Variability Was Down
  • Inflation and Interest Differentials Narrowed
  • Asymmetric Adjustments
  • The Maastricht Treaty and the Euro
  • ERM II
  • Pros and Cons of a Monetary Union
  • Optimum Currency Areas
  • Is Europe an Optimum Currency Area?
  • 5.7 Summary
  • Questions
  • Problems
  • Bibliography
  • Part II International Parity Conditions and Exchange Rate Determination
  • 6 Interest Rate Parity
  • 6.1 The Theory of Covered Interest Rate Parity
  • The Intuition Behind Interest Rate Parity
  • Deriving Interest Rate Parity
  • A General Expression for Interest Rate Parity
  • Interest Rate Parity and Forward Premiums and Discounts
  • Interest Rate Parity with Continuously Compounded Interest Rates (Advanced)
  • Covered Interest Arbitrage
  • A Box Diagram
  • 6.2 Covered Interest Rate Parity in Practice
  • The External Currency Market
  • Transaction Costs in the External Currency Market
  • How the External Currency Market Affects Other Capital Markets
  • Covered Interest Arbitrage with Transaction Costs (Advanced)
  • Does Covered Interest Parity Hold?
  • 6.3 Why Deviations from Interest Rate Parity May Seem to Exist
  • Default Risks
  • Exchange Controls
  • Political Risk
  • 6.4 Hedging Transaction Risk in the Money Market
  • Hedging a Foreign Currency Liability
  • Hedging a Foreign Currency Receivable
  • 6.5 The Term Structure of Forward Premiums and Discounts
  • The Term Structure of Interest Rates
  • Spot Interest Rates
  • A Review of Bond Pricing
  • Yields to Maturity
  • Deriving Long-Term Spot Interest Rates
  • Long-Term Forward Rates and Premiums
  • 6.6 Summary
  • Questions
  • Problems
  • Bibliography
  • 7 Speculation and Risk in the Foreign Exchange Market
  • 7.1 Speculating in the Foreign Exchange Market
  • Uncovered Foreign Money Market Investments
  • Speculating with Forward Contracts
  • The Break-Even Spot Rate
  • Comparing Forward Market and Foreign Money Market Investments
  • Currency Speculation and Profits and Losses
  • Quantifying Expected Losses and Profits
  • Lessons from History: The Variability of Currency Changes and Forward Market Returns
  • 7.2 Uncovered Interest Rate Parity and the Unbiasedness Hypothesis
  • Uncovered Interest Rate Parity
  • The Unbiasedness Hypothesis
  • Forecast Errors
  • Unbiased Predictors
  • The Unbiasedness Hypothesis and Market Efficiency
  • 7.3 Risk Premiums in the Foreign Exchange Market
  • What Determines Risk Premiums?
  • Systematic and Unsystematic Risk
  • The CAPM
  • Applying the CAPM to Forward Market Returns
  • Formal Derivation of CAPM Risk Premiums (Advanced)
  • The CAPM in Symbols
  • The CAPM and Forward Market Returns
  • 7.4 Uncovered Interest Rate Parity and the Unbiasedness Hypothesis in Practice
  • Situations Where Premiums Matter
  • International Portfolio Management
  • The Cost of Hedging
  • Exchange Rate Forecasting
  • Exchange Rate Determination
  • 7.5 Empirical Evidence on the Unbiasedness Hypothesis
  • The Quest for a Test
  • Incorporating Rational Expectations into the Test
  • A Test Using the Sample Means
  • Data on Rates of Appreciation and Forward Premiums
  • The Test
  • High-Interest-Rate Currencies Depreciate
  • Regression Tests of the Unbiasedness of Forward Rates
  • Interpreting the Forward Bias
  • 7.6 Alternative Interpretations of the Test Results
  • Market Inefficiency
  • Exploiting the Forward Bias and Carry Trades
  • Sharpe Ratios and Leverage
  • Currency Strategies in Practice
  • Risk Premiums
  • The Variability of the Risk Premium (Advanced)
  • Is It Risk?
  • Problems Interpreting the Statistics
  • Unstable Coefficients in the Unbiasedness Hypothesis Regressions
  • Peso Problems
  • The Peso Problem and Carry Trades
  • Swedish Interest Rates of 500%
  • 7.7 Summary
  • Questions
  • Problems
  • Appendix
  • Appendix 7.1 The Siegel Paradox
  • Appendix 7.2 The Portfolio Diversification Argument and the CAPM
  • Appendix 7.3 A Regression Refresher
  • Bibliography
  • 8 Purchasing Power Parity and Real Exchange Rates
  • 8.1 Price Levels, Price Indexes, and the Purchasing Power of a Currency
  • The General Idea of Purchasing Power
  • Calculating the Price Level
  • Calculating a Price Index
  • Internal Purchasing Power
  • External Purchasing Power
  • 8.2 Absolute Purchasing Power Parity
  • The Theory of Absolute Purchasing Power Parity
  • Goods Market Arbitrage
  • 8.3 The Law of One Price
  • The Perfect Market Ideal
  • Why Violations of the Law of One Price Occur
  • Tariffs and Quotas
  • Transaction Costs That Prevent Trade
  • Speculation and Contracts
  • Non-Competitive Markets
  • Sticky Prices
  • How Wide Is the Border?
  • 8.4 Describing Deviations from PPP
  • Overvaluations and Undervaluations of Currencies
  • Predictions Based on Overvaluations and Undervaluations
  • The MacPPP Standard
  • The Implied MacPPP Rates
  • Overvaluations and Undervaluations
  • Predicting British Heartburn
  • The Econometric Evidence
  • 8.5 Exchange Rates and Absolute PPPs Using CPI Data
  • Interpreting the Charts
  • Overvaluations and Undervaluations
  • Fixing When PPP Held
  • Analyzing the Data
  • Dollar–Pound
  • Dollar–Euro
  • Yen–Dollar
  • Canadian Dollar–US Dollar
  • Mexican Peso–US Dollar
  • 8.6 Explaining the Failure of Absolute PPP
  • Changes in Relative Prices
  • A Burgers-and-Sushi World
  • Non-Traded Goods
  • Housing
  • Technological Change
  • PPP Deviations and the Balance of Payments
  • 8.7 Comparing Incomes across Countries
  • Comparing Incomes in New York and Tokyo
  • The Salary Offers
  • A Naïve Calculation
  • Incorporating Purchasing Power
  • Working with the PPP Rate
  • Comparing GDPs Using PPP Exchange Rates
  • 8.8 Relative PPP
  • A General Expression for Relative PPP
  • The Logic of Relative PPP
  • A Symbolic Representation of Relative PPP
  • Relative PPP with Continuously Compounded Rates of Change (Advanced)
  • 8.9 The Real Exchange Rate
  • The Definition of the Real Exchange Rate
  • Real Appreciations and Real Depreciations
  • The Percentage Change in the Real Exchange Rate
  • What Leads to Real Appreciations or Depreciations?
  • Trade-Weighted Real Exchange Rates
  • 8.10 Summary
  • Questions
  • Problems
  • Bibliography
  • 9 Measuring and Managing Real Exchange Risk
  • 9.1 How Real Exchange Rates Affect Real Profitability
  • The Real Profitability of an Exporting Firm
  • Calculating a Firm’s Nominal Profit
  • A Firm’s Real Export Revenue
  • 9.2 Real Exchange Risk at Exporters, Importers, and Domestic Firms
  • The Real Exchange Rate Risk of a Net Exporter
  • A Competitive Dilemma
  • The Real Exchange Risk of a Net Importer
  • The Real Exchange Risk of an Import Competitor
  • Measuring Real Exchange Risk Exposure
  • The Present Value of a Firm’s Profits
  • 9.3 Sharing the Real Exchange Risk: An Example
  • Safe Air Evaluates an International Supply Contract
  • The Indexing Formula
  • The Consultant’s Task
  • Basic Data and Analysis
  • Profitability Under a Simple Contract with Constant Prices
  • Sharing the Exchange Rate Risk with Constant Prices
  • Analyzing Contracts When Inflation and Real Exchange Rates Are Changing
  • Safe Air’s Real Cost per Tank
  • Metallwerke’s Real Revenue per Tank
  • Designing a Contract That Shares the Real Exchange Risk
  • Understanding the Contract
  • Would the Redesigned Contract Be Adopted?
  • Relative Bargaining Strength
  • 9.4 Pricing-To-Market Strategies
  • Pricing-to-Market by a Monopolist
  • A Monopolistic Exporter
  • A Monopolistic Net Importer
  • Empirical Evidence on Pricing-to-Market
  • 9.5 Evaluating the Performance of a Foreign Subsidiary
  • Three Types of Subsidiaries
  • The Net Importer
  • The Net Exporter
  • The Neutral Firm
  • Initial Operating Profitability
  • Actual Versus Forecasted Operating Results
  • RiceNoodle’s Results
  • Results at ThaiComp and WeRToys
  • Comparing the Optimal Response with No Response by Managers
  • Comparisons with No Operating Responses
  • Comparisons with Optimal Responses
  • Who Deserves a Bonus?
  • Assessing the Long-Run Viability of a Subsidiary
  • 9.6 Strategies for Managing Real Exchange Risk
  • Transitory Versus Permanent Changes in Real Exchange Rates
  • Production Management
  • Production Scheduling
  • Input Sourcing
  • Plant Location Decisions
  • Marketing Management
  • Pricing Policies
  • The Frequency of Price Adjustments
  • Market Entry Decisions
  • Brand Loyalty
  • 9.7 Summary
  • Questions
  • Problems
  • Bibliography
  • 10 Exchange Rate Determination and Forecasting
  • 10.1 Parity Conditions and Exchange Rate Forecasts
  • The Fisher Hypothesis
  • Interest Rates and Inflation
  • Real Rates of Return
  • The Ex Ante Real Interest Rate
  • The International Parity Conditions
  • CIRP
  • UIRP or Unbiasedness
  • PPP
  • Real Interest Rates and the Parity Conditions
  • Real Interest Rate Parity
  • Testing Real Interest Rate Parity
  • 10.2 Currency Forecasting Techniques
  • Fundamental Exchange Rate Forecasting
  • Exchange Rate Forecasting with Technical Analysis
  • Why Technical Analysis Might Work
  • Evaluating Forecasts
  • Accuracy
  • Being on the Right Side of the Forward Rate
  • Profitability
  • 10.3 Fundamental Exchange Rate Forecasting
  • Forecasting Performance of Fundamental Exchange Rate Models
  • Forecasting Models and Benchmarks
  • The Asset Market Approach to Exchange Rate Determination
  • UIRP and the Exchange Rate
  • The Exchange Rate as an Asset Price
  • The Monetary Approach
  • Sticky Prices and Overshooting
  • Why the Random Walk Works
  • News and Exchange Rates
  • The Real Exchange Rate, the Real Interest Rate Differential, and the Current Account
  • Converting UIRP to Real Terms
  • Mean Reversion
  • Empirical Evidence
  • The Real Exchange Rate and the BOP
  • The Trade Balance and Real Exchange Rates
  • The Capital Account and Real Exchange Rates
  • Equilibrium
  • PPP-Based Forecasts
  • 10.4 Technical Analysis
  • Pure Technical Analysis: Chartism
  • Potentially Spurious Patterns
  • Trading on a Random Walk
  • Does Charting Work?
  • Filter Rules
  • x% Rules
  • Moving-Average Crossover Rules
  • Filter Rule Profitability
  • Regression Analysis
  • Nonlinear Models
  • Evaluating Forecasting Services
  • 10.5 Predicting Devaluations
  • What Causes a Currency Crisis?
  • Macroeconomic Conditions
  • Self-Fulfilling Expectations
  • Contagion
  • Empirical Evidence on the Predictability of Currency Crises
  • The Rocky 1990s: Currency Crises Galore
  • 1991–1993: Currency Turmoil in Europe
  • 1994–1995: The Mexican Crisis and the Tequila Effect
  • 1997: The Southeast Asian Crisis
  • 10.6 Summary
  • Questions
  • Problems
  • Bibliography
  • Part III International Capital Markets
  • 11 International Debt Financing
  • 11.1 The Global Sources of Funds for International Firms
  • The Financing Mix Around the World
  • 11.2 The Characteristics of Debt Instruments
  • Currency of Denomination
  • Centralized Versus Decentralized Debt Denomination
  • Is Issuing Debt in Low-Interest Rate Countries a Good Idea?
  • Debt Portfolios
  • Maturity
  • The Nature of Interest Rate Payments: Fixed-Rate Versus Floating-Rate Debt
  • When to Use Floating Rate Debt
  • The Expectations Hypothesis
  • Tradability of Debt
  • Intermediated and Direct Debt
  • Private Placements
  • The International Character of Debt
  • 11.3 A Tour of the World’s Bond Markets
  • Size and Structure of the World Bond Market
  • Domestic Bond Markets
  • The International Bond Market
  • The Foreign Bond Market
  • The Eurobond Market
  • The Primary Market for Eurobonds
  • The Secondary Market for Eurobonds
  • Global Bonds
  • Dragon Bonds
  • The Blurring of the Distinctions in the International Bond Market
  • The Types of Debt Instruments in the International Bond Market
  • Straight Fixed-Rate Issues
  • Floating-Rate Notes
  • Equity-Related Bonds
  • Currency of Denomination
  • 11.4 International Banking
  • Banks as MNCs
  • Types of International Banking Offices
  • Correspondent Banks
  • Representative Offices
  • Foreign Branches
  • Subsidiary and Affiliate Banks
  • Offshore Banking Centers
  • Edge Act Banks
  • International Banking Facilities
  • International Banking Regulation
  • International Capital Adequacy: The 1988 Basel Accord
  • A New Capital-Adequacy Framework or Basel II
  • Basel III and the Crisis
  • 11.5 International Bank Loans
  • Eurocredits
  • Types of Eurocredits
  • Syndicates
  • Fees and Borrowing Costs
  • History and Size of Eurocredits
  • The Secondary Market
  • The Euronote Market
  • Euronotes
  • Euro-Medium-Term Notes
  • The Major Debt Arrangers
  • 11.6 Comparing the Costs of Debt
  • The All-in-Cost Principle
  • Components of the AIC
  • Credit Ratings
  • Rating Schemes
  • Minimizing the Cost of Debt Internationally
  • Why Source Debt Internationally?
  • Credit Spreads Across Countries
  • Empirical Evidence
  • 11.7 Summary
  • Questions
  • Problems
  • Bibliography
  • 12 International Equity Financing
  • 12.1 A Tour of International Stock Markets
  • The Size of Stock Markets
  • Emerging Stock Markets
  • Stock Markets and the Economy
  • The Organization and Operation of Stock Markets
  • Legal Organization
  • The Globalization of Exchanges
  • Trading Practices
  • Automation and Electronic Trading
  • Examples of Trading Practices on Major Exchanges
  • Turnover and Transaction Costs
  • 12.2 International Cross-Listing and Depositary Receipts
  • American Depositary Receipts
  • Types of ADRs
  • Global Depositary Receipts
  • Size and Growth of the Depositary Receipt Market
  • Global Registered Shares
  • 12.3 The Advantages and Disadvantages of Cross-Listing
  • Why Firms Choose to Cross-list
  • Liquidity
  • Wider Shareholder Base
  • Market Integration
  • Corporate Governance Signal
  • Capital Needs and Growth Opportunities
  • Other Benefits of Cross-listing
  • Why Firms Decide Against Cross-Listing
  • 12.4 Strategic Alliances
  • 12.5 Summary
  • Questions
  • Problems
  • Bibliography
  • 13 International Capital Market Equilibrium
  • 13.1 Risk and Return of International Investments
  • The Two Risks of Investing Abroad
  • The Volatility of International Investments
  • The Volatility of Currency and Equity Returns
  • Adding Up Volatility
  • Expected Returns
  • Average Returns
  • Currency Components of Returns
  • Sharpe Ratios
  • 13.2 The Benefits of International Diversification
  • Risk Reduction Through International Diversification
  • Idiosyncratic Variance Changes over Time
  • International Return Correlations
  • What Drives Correlations of Returns?
  • Asymmetric Correlations?
  • The Effect of International Diversification on Sharpe Ratios
  • Portfolio Risk and Return
  • When Does International Diversification Improve the Sharpe Ratio?
  • Investment Hurdle Rates
  • 13.3 Optimal Portfolio Allocation
  • Preferences
  • The Case of One Risky Asset
  • The Optimal Portfolio
  • The Mean–Standard Deviation Frontier
  • Two-Fund Separation (Advanced)
  • The Efficient Frontier
  • The Mean-Variance-Efficient (MVE) Portfolio
  • 13.4 The Capital Asset Pricing Model
  • Assumptions and Origins
  • A Derivation of the CAPM (Advanced)
  • Interpreting the CAPM
  • The CAPM Equilibrium
  • The Risk Premium on the Market
  • Individual Expected Returns and the Role of Beta
  • Domestic Versus World CAPMs
  • The Role of Exchange Rates
  • International CAPMs (Advanced)
  • 13.5 The CAPM in Practice
  • A Recipe for the Cost of Equity Capital
  • The Benchmark Problem
  • The Market Portfolio
  • World Market Proxies
  • Getting the Benchmark Wrong
  • Beta Estimation
  • The Risk Premium on the Market
  • Historical Estimates
  • Caveats
  • The Need for Sensitivity Analysis
  • 13.6 Integrated Versus Segmented Markets
  • Investing in Emerging Markets
  • The Cost of Capital in Integrated and Segmented Markets
  • Equity Market Liberalizations
  • Segmentation and Integration over Time
  • A Model of Time-Varying Market Integration
  • The Practical Implications of Segmentation and Time-Varying Integration
  • Home Bias and Its Implications
  • Implications for Pricing
  • Time-Varying Correlations
  • 13.7 Alternative Cost-of-Capital Models
  • The Usefulness of the CAPM
  • The Consequences of Using the Wrong Model
  • Factor Models and the Fama–French Model
  • The Value and the Small Firm Effects
  • The Fama–French Three-Factor Model (Advanced)
  • 13.8 Summary
  • Questions
  • Problems
  • Appendix 13.1 The Mathematics of International Diversification
  • Risk Reduction
  • Improving the Sharpe Ratio
  • Bibliography
  • 14 Country and Political Risk
  • 14.1 Country Risk Versus Political Risk
  • Country Risk
  • Financial and Economic Risk Factors
  • Political Risk Factors
  • Expropriation or Nationalization
  • Contract Repudiation
  • Taxes and Regulation
  • Exchange Controls
  • Corruption and Legal Inefficiency
  • Ethnic Violence, Political Unrest, and Terrorism
  • Home-Country Restrictions
  • The Debt Crisis
  • Origins of the Debt Crisis
  • Managing the Debt Crisis
  • The Brady Plan
  • 14.2 Incorporating Political Risk in Capital Budgeting
  • Adjusting Expected Cash Flows for Political Risk
  • General Formulas
  • Adjusting the Discount Rate Instead of Cash Flows
  • Discount Rates for Emerging Markets and Political Risk
  • 14.3 Country and Political Risk Analysis
  • Country Risk Ratings
  • Political Risk Analysis
  • Some Examples of Ratings Systems
  • The PRS Group’s ICRG Rating System
  • Financial and Economic Risk Factors
  • The Political Risk Components
  • Overall Ratings
  • Country Credit Spreads
  • Sovereign Credit Ratings
  • Why Is Sovereign Credit Risk Different?
  • Historical Background: Brady Bonds
  • Analyzing a Brady Bond
  • Country Spreads and Political Risk Probabilities
  • Default Probabilities with Positive Recovery Values
  • Case Study: The Mexican Peso Crisis and Country Risk
  • Computing Political Risk Probabilities
  • Using Country Spreads to Compute Political Risk Probabilities
  • Using Political Risk Ratings
  • 14.4 Managing Political Risk
  • Structuring an Investment
  • Insurance
  • Political Risk Insurance for US Companies
  • Political Risk Insurance in Emerging and Transitioning Economies
  • Public Versus Private Insurance
  • Project Finance
  • 14.5 Summary
  • Questions
  • Problems
  • Bibliography
  • Part IV International Corporate Finance
  • 15 International Capital Budgeting
  • 15.1 An Overview of Adjusted Net Present Value
  • Step 1: Discount the Cash Flows of the All-Equity Firm
  • Step 2: Add the Value of the Financial Side Effects
  • Step 3: Value Any Real Options
  • 15.2 Deriving the NPV of Free Cash Flow
  • Incremental Profit
  • Deriving Free Cash Flow
  • Revenues and Costs
  • EBIT and NOPLAT
  • Free Cash Flow
  • Discounting Free Cash Flows
  • Calculating the Terminal Value of a Project
  • 15.3 Financial Side Effects
  • The Costs of Issuing Securities
  • Tax Shields for Certain Securities
  • The Proper Discount Rate
  • Costs of Financial Distress
  • Direct Costs of Financial Distress
  • Indirect Costs of Financial Distress
  • The Equilibrium Amount of Debt
  • Subsidized Financing
  • 15.4 Real Options
  • Problems with the Discounted Cash Flow Approach
  • 15.5 Parent Versus Subsidiary Cash Flows
  • A Three-Step Approach to Determining the Value of a Foreign Subsidiary
  • 15.6 The Case of International Wood Products
  • IWPI-Spain’s Free Cash Flows
  • Forecasting Total Revenue
  • Forecasting Net Working Capital, Capital Expenditures, and Depreciation
  • Forecasting Total Costs
  • Forecasting Net Operating Profit Less Adjusted Taxes (NOPLAT)
  • Forecasting IWPI-Spain’s Free Cash Flow
  • The Net Present Value of IWPI-Spain
  • Deriving the Terminal Value
  • The Parent Company’s Perspective
  • Forecasting the Dividends Received by IWPI-US
  • Calculating the US Foreign Tax Credit
  • Calculating the US Income Tax Liability for IWPI-US
  • Calculating the Net Present Value of After-Tax Dividends Received by IWPI-US
  • Forecasting the Royalty and Overhead Allocation Fees
  • Forecasting the Profits Earned from Intermediate Goods
  • Valuing the Financial Side Effects
  • Interest Tax Shields
  • Interest Subsidies
  • The Full ANPV of IWPI-Spain
  • Cannibalization of Export Sales
  • 15.7 Summary
  • Questions
  • Problems
  • Appendix 15.1 Deriving the Value of a Perpetuity
  • Bibliography
  • 16 Additional Topics in International Capital Budgeting
  • 16.1 Alternative Approaches to Capital Budgeting
  • The ANPV Approach
  • Two Valuation Alternatives to ANPV
  • The WACC Approach to Capital Budgeting
  • WACC Without Taxes
  • WACC with Taxes
  • Why rWACC Must Be Less Than rA
  • Why Use WACC?
  • Deriving rA from rD and rE
  • Pros and Cons of Using WACC
  • The Flow-to-Equity Method of Capital Budgeting
  • The Equivalence of FTE to Other Approaches
  • The Pros and Cons of Alternative Capital Budgeting Methods
  • 16.2 Forecasting Cash Flows of Foreign Projects
  • The Choice of Currency
  • Reconciling the Two Methods for Discounting Foreign Cash Flows
  • 16.3 Case Study: CMTC’s Australian Project
  • The Australian Investment Proposal
  • Gathering the Economic Data
  • Expected One-Year Real Interest Rates
  • Book Value and Depreciation
  • Discounted Cash Flows
  • Case Solution
  • Initial Cash Flows
  • The After-Tax Cost Savings of the Project
  • Depreciation Tax Shields
  • The Total Expected After-Tax Cash Flows in Australian Dollars
  • Forecast Future Spot Rates
  • The US Dollar Discount Rates
  • The Net Present Value of the Project in US Dollars
  • How Incorrect Discounting Leads to Problems
  • The Net Present Value of the Project in Australian Dollars
  • An Incorrect Approach – Again
  • The Expected Real Depreciation of the Australian Dollar
  • 16.4 Terminal Value When Return on Investment Equals the Weighted Average Cost of Capital
  • Equilibrium Rate of Return on Investment
  • The Return on Investment and the Plowback Ratio
  • The Terminal Value Calculation
  • Terminal Value with Perpetual Growth and with Expected Inflation
  • 16.5 Tax Shields on Foreign Currency Borrowing
  • The Tax Implications of Borrowing in a Foreign Currency
  • Foreign Currency Borrowing by Banana Computers
  • Banana’s Borrowing Possibilities
  • The Dollar Loan
  • The Euro and Yen Loans
  • Comparing the Foreign Currency Loans
  • 16.6 Conflicts between Bondholders and Stockholders
  • The Incentive to Take Risks
  • The Low-Variance Project
  • The High-Variance Project
  • The Underinvestment Problem
  • A Firm Without a New Project
  • A Firm with a New Project
  • Underinvestment in Emerging Market Crises
  • Other Managerial Problems Caused by Financial Distress
  • 16.7 International Differences in Accounting Standards
  • Empirical Effects of IFRS Adoption
  • 16.8 Summary
  • Questions
  • Problems
  • Bibliography
  • 17 Risk Management and the Foreign Currency Hedging Decision
  • 17.1 To Hedge or Not to Hedge
  • Hedging in an Entrepreneurial Venture
  • Hedging in a Modern Corporation
  • The Hedging-Is-Irrelevant Logic of Modigliani and Miller
  • 17.2 Arguments against Hedging
  • Hedging Is Costly
  • A True Hedging Cost: The Bid–Ask Spread
  • The Employee Cost
  • Hedging Equity Risk Is Difficult, if Not Impossible
  • The Weehawken Widget Project
  • Changes in the Project’s Value over Time
  • The Project’s Value with One Year of Hedged Cash Flows
  • The Project’s Value with Two Years of Hedged Cash Flows
  • The Project’s Value with an Infinite Sequence of Hedged Cash Flows
  • The Project’s Value with an Equity Hedge
  • Reality Is More Complicated
  • Hedging Can Create Bad Incentives
  • 17.3 Arguments for Hedging
  • Hedging Can Reduce the Firm’s Expected Taxes
  • General Principles
  • Hedging Can Lower the Costs of Financial Distress
  • Hedging Can Improve the Firm’s Future Investment Decisions
  • The Basic Logic of the Argument
  • Asymmetric Information Is the Problem
  • Hedging Can Change the Assessment of a Firm’s Managers
  • 17.4 The Hedging Rationale of Real Firms
  • Merck’s Hedging Rationale
  • Merck’s Five-Step Procedure
  • Analysis of Hedging at HDG Inc.
  • Oversight, Control, and Operations
  • HDG’s Motivations for Risk Management
  • 17.5 Hedging Trends
  • Information from Surveys
  • The Wharton/CIBC Survey
  • Empirical Analysis of Why Firms Hedge
  • Financial Effects of Hedging
  • To Hedge or Not to Hedge: Understanding Your Competitors
  • 17.6 Summary
  • Questions
  • Problems
  • Bibliography
  • Part V Managing Ongoing Operations
  • 18 Financing International Trade
  • 18.1 The Fundamental Problem with International Trade
  • 18.2 International Trade Documents
  • Purchase Order
  • Bills of Lading
  • Straight Bill of Lading
  • Order Bill of Lading
  • On-Board Versus Received-for-Shipment Bills of Lading
  • Clean Versus Foul Bills of Lading
  • Commercial Invoices
  • Packing Lists
  • Insurance
  • Open Insurance Policies
  • Consular Invoice
  • Certificates of Analysis
  • 18.3 Methods of Payment
  • Cash in Advance
  • Documentary Credits
  • Drafts
  • Advantages of Documentary Credits to Exporters
  • Advantages of Documentary Credits to Importers
  • Attributes of Documentary Credits
  • Summary of the Creation and Use of a D/C and a B/A
  • Documentary Collections
  • Advantages of Documentary Collections
  • Disadvantages of Documentary Collections
  • Sales on Open Account
  • 18.4 Financing Exports
  • Bank Line of Credit
  • Banker’s Acceptances
  • Eligible Versus Ineligible Banker’s Acceptances
  • Buyer Credit
  • Selling Accounts Receivable
  • Limited-Recourse Financing: Forfaiting
  • The Mechanics of Forfaiting
  • Export Factoring
  • Methods of Payment
  • Government Sources of Export Financing and Credit Insurance
  • Ex-Im Bank
  • PEFCO
  • Export Credit Insurance
  • 18.5 Countertrade
  • Transactions Without Money
  • Barter and Clearing Arrangements
  • Switch Trading
  • Countertrade Involving Money or Credit
  • Buybacks
  • Counterpurchases
  • Offsets
  • 18.6 Summary
  • Questions
  • Bibliography
  • 19 Managing Net Working Capital
  • 19.1 The Purpose of Net Working Capital
  • Inventories as Assets
  • Other Current Assets
  • Short-Term Liabilities
  • 19.2 International Cash Management
  • Constraints on International Cash Management
  • Cash Management with a Centralized Pool
  • Short-Term Cash Planning
  • Managing Surpluses and Deficits
  • Forecasts of Cash Flows
  • Multilateral Netting Systems
  • Using a Centralized Cash Management System to Reduce Precautionary Cash Demands
  • Limits to Centralization
  • 19.3 Cash Transfers from Affiliates to Parents
  • International Dividend Cash Flows
  • Tax Planning
  • Dealing with Political Risk
  • Dealing with Foreign Exchange Risk
  • Other Factors Affecting Dividend Policy
  • International Royalty and Management-Fee Cash Flows
  • Repatriation in a Joint Venture
  • Tax Advantages of Royalties and Fees
  • Transfer Pricing and Cash Flows
  • Shifting Income and Tax Burdens Between Countries
  • The Effect of a Low Transfer Price
  • The Effect of a High Transfer Price
  • Transfer Pricing Regulations
  • How Transfer Prices Affect Managers’ Incentives
  • Using Transfer Prices to Offset Tariffs
  • A General Transfer Pricing Policy with Tariffs
  • Using Transfer Pricing to Deal with Foreign Exchange Quotas
  • Transfer Pricing in Joint Ventures
  • Strategies for Dealing with Blocked Funds
  • Fronting Loans
  • Reinvesting Working Capital Locally
  • Altering the Terms of Trade
  • 19.4 Managing Accounts Receivable
  • Currency of Denomination
  • Leading and Lagging Payments
  • Credit Terms
  • 19.5 Inventory Management
  • Optimal Inventory Theory
  • Devaluation or Depreciation Risk
  • 19.6 Summary
  • Questions
  • Problems
  • Bibliography
  • Part VI Foreign Currency Derivatives
  • 20 Foreign Currency Futures and Options
  • 20.1 The Basics of Futures Contracts
  • Futures Versus Forwards
  • Exchange Trading
  • Standardized Amounts
  • Fixed Maturities
  • Credit Risk
  • Margins
  • Marking to Market
  • The Pricing of Futures Contracts
  • Comparing Payoffs
  • Why Futures Can Differ from Forwards
  • Futures Quotes
  • 20.2 Hedging Transaction Risk with Futures
  • Hedging at Nancy Foods
  • The Hedging Decision
  • A Numeric Example
  • Potential Problems with a Futures Hedge
  • Basis Risk
  • 20.3 Basics of Foreign Currency Option Contracts
  • Basic Option Terminology
  • European Versus American Options
  • Strike Prices and Intrinsic Value
  • Options Trading
  • Currency Options on the NASDAQ OMX PHLX
  • Currency Options at the CME Group
  • Exchange-Listed Currency Warrants
  • 20.4 The Use of Options in Risk Management
  • A Bidding Situation at Bagwell Construction
  • The Transaction Risk
  • The Problem with a Forward Hedge
  • The Options Solution
  • Using Options to Hedge Transaction Risk
  • Hedging with Options as Buying Insurance
  • Hedging Foreign Currency Risk with Forwards and Options
  • Options as Insurance Contracts
  • Changing the Quality of the Insurance Policy
  • Speculating with Options
  • Speculating on Foreign Currency Receivables
  • Speculating on Foreign Currency Liabilities
  • Options Valuation
  • The Intrinsic Value of an Option
  • The Time Value of an Option
  • Increasing the Exercise Price
  • An Increase in the Variance
  • Increasing the Time to Expiration
  • Put–Call Parity for Foreign Currency Options
  • 20.5 Combinations of Options and Exotic Options
  • Range Forwards and Cylinder Options
  • Synthesizing Cylinder Options
  • Other Exotic Options
  • Average-Rate Options
  • Barrier Options
  • Lookback Options
  • Digital Options
  • 20.6 Summary
  • Questions
  • Problems
  • Appendix 20.1 Foreign Currency Option Pricing (Advanced)
  • A Two-State Example of Arbitrage Pricing
  • The Binomial Option Pricing Model
  • The Continuous Time Case
  • Comparative Statics for the Call Option Price
  • The Delta of an Option
  • Delta Hedging
  • The Gamma of an Option
  • The Elasticity of an Option
  • The Vega of an Option
  • The Rhos of an Option
  • The Theta of an Option
  • Implied Volatility
  • Summary
  • Additional Questions
  • Problems
  • Bibliography
  • 21 Interest Rate and Foreign Currency Swaps
  • 21.1 Introduction to Swaps
  • Parallel Loans and Back-to-Back Loans
  • Parallel Loans
  • Back-to-Back Loans
  • Basic Aspects of Currency Swaps and Interest Rate Swaps
  • The Size of the Swap Markets
  • Credit Default Swaps and the Financial Crisis
  • 21.2 Interest Rate Swaps
  • Why Use Interest Rate Swaps?
  • Fixed Versus Floating-Rate Debt
  • Changed Circumstances
  • Views on the Future
  • Minimizing the Cost of Debt
  • Manipulating Earnings
  • The Nature of Interest Rate Swap Contracts
  • Notional Principal
  • Bid–Ask Prices for Interest Rate Swaps
  • Profits and Risks for Swap Dealers
  • Dealing with Credit Risks
  • 21.3 Foreign Currency Swaps
  • The Mechanics of Modern Currency Swaps
  • Comparative Borrowing Advantages in Matched Currency Swaps
  • The Goodweek–Bridgerock Situation
  • Absolute Versus Comparative Advantage
  • Using a Financial Intermediary in a Currency Swap
  • The Sources of the Gains from a Swap
  • Swapping Bond Proceeds and Coupon Rates with Quoted Swap Rates
  • The Transactions of Goodweek
  • The Transactions of Bridgerock
  • The Transactions of Bank Carribus
  • Currency Swaps as a Package of Forward Contracts
  • Euro Bond Issues with Forward Hedging
  • The Value of a Currency Swap
  • The Rationale for Currency Swaps
  • Why Swaps and Not Forwards?
  • 21.4 Summary
  • Questions
  • Problems
  • Bibliography
  • Glossary
  • Index
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