Banking FX Risk Hedging Products
Having reduced the
FX exposure as much as possible by discussion, negotiation and appropriate
contract terms and natural hedges, residual FX risks may need to be hedged
using the financial instruments available to banks.
To protect their
customers against unfavourable FX rate movements banks have developed a number
of FX risk hedging products based on the following three techniques:
- Forward FX contracts
- Currency options
- Currency futures
All three techniques require the two parties to the deal to deliver unconditionally an agreed amount of currency on a fixed or determinable future date. Exceptionally, in the case of currency options there is no obligation to deliver the currency, only a right.
Forward FX Market Hedging
Once an exposure has
been identified (and reduced where possible using internal offsetting methods
of FX management), a company can create a cashflow in the opposite direction
using the FX market. The FX exposure is hedged by the creation of an opposite,
but otherwise identical, exposure, in terms of currency, amount and timing.
This is called 'hedging', i.e. FX cashflows are counterbalanced or neutralised
at a fixed FX rate.
EXAMPLE
Not hedging in Forward FX contract
Contract Value: £1.0 million
French buyer asks
its bank in France to pay the invoiced amount .
French bank buys
£1.0 million with Euros at the Spot Rate of
exchange on the FX Market.
This is not the best
deal for the French buyer as he has risked strengthening against the Euro
during the contract period. Also he does not know his Euro costs until time of
payment.
Hedged approach
French buyer at time of placing contract looks ahead and sees that UK Sterling interest rates for the period are higher than French interest rates.
This implies that is weaker than the Euro in the
Forward market.
It would be cheaper in Euro terms to buy forward at the time of placing the contract.
The alternative is
to risk a stronger Sterling Spot Rate at the time of payment.
By buying Sterling
Forward French buyer eliminates any adverse FX movement from the date of buying
forward to the date of payment of the UK seller's invoice.
French importer is now certain of his FX costs from time of placing the contract.
As is at a Discount in the Forward
market the Euro cost is not only fixed at the time of contract but also lower.
EXAMPLE
A UK-based exporter
enters into a contract with a
The goods are due to
be delivered on 1 September and paid for on 30 September, four months after the
contract was originally signed. The exposure profile as of 1 June is:
Currency: US dollars
Amount: $25,000
Payment: 30 September
Position: long
The exporter decides
to fully hedge this exposure.
On 1 June, it
arranges to sell Forward $25,000 to a bank for value 30 September, in return
for receiving sterling at a pre-agreed exchange rate.
This creates an
opposite (i.e. short) position, but otherwise identical in terms of currency,
amount and timing. It is a short position because the exporter has sold
currency that he does not yet have.
Most international
trading transactions are hedged using the Forward FX market. Companies and
institutions hedging capital transfers of fixed, known amounts on specific
dates under their control have the additional choice of options or currency
futures. Currency options are also a valuable hedging tool for the more
experienced businesses with well developed currency cash management systems.
Speculators play by
their own rules, but are not averse to protecting their downside risk when
considered necessary.
Managing Supplier's FX Exposure
A supplier can hedge
a transaction perfectly if the date and amount of payment for the sale is known
in advance. If the exact date of payment
is not known, the supplier can use a:
- Forward FX contract, or less probably
- Currency option (value date), or
- Currency overdraft

If you are importing or exporting, for expert commercial foreign exchange services, speak to us at Raphael's Bank.

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