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Summary International Corporate Finance

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A very clear summary for the course International Corporate Finance, made from notes from the lesson, powerpoint by James Thewissen's professor. Summary was made in the year .

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  • May 11, 2022
  • 61
  • 2021/2022
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International corporate finance:
Part 1: Architecture of International Markets
Class 1: Spot markets for foreign currency
1.1 How do exchange markets work?
The exchange market is not an organized market like the stock market
 This means it doesn’t start and end at a certain time, and doesn’t have platform

Currency is a commodity, if you keep printing it, the value will drop.

We see that the volume of transactions of time has risen and keeps on rising.

Transactions used to be on paper, now almost only online via computer

2 tiers:
 Wholesale tier with an information network of banks and big corporations
o 2 kind of professionals active
 Market makers: Give 2-way quotes binding up to an agreed limit. It is
purely bilateral. Ex: You want to sell 1milj EUR for pounds than a
market maker will give you a price you can take or leave.
 Brokers: These shop around to find takers for someone else’s offer. He
looks for the special deals where he can be cheap and sell high.
We call this arbitrage, hence why special deals
 Retail tier: People go on holiday and need foreign currency. They go to a shop, …

Ask and Bid price  Ask price > bid price. The Ask price is what the bank asks, the bid price is
what you can sell it for. Ask price > bid price because of risk, transaction costs, …

We always look at the ratio of HC/FC with HC (Home Currency) and FC (Foreign currency)
Ex. 1.25USD/EUR  If you want to buy 1EUR, you need 1.25 USD. THIS IS THE RATE FOR EUR
IN TERMS OF USD

3 Major markets: London, Tokyo and New York  London > Tokyo + New York
 Less important: Sidney, Hong Kong, Singapore, …
 Ambitious startup: Dubai

1.2 Spot transaction
Spot (rate: St): A spot transaction in the interbank market is the purchase of foreign
exchange, with the delivery and payment to take place, normally, on the second following
business day so t+2.

 So it requires the delivery/payment to take place at a future value date of a specified
amount of one currency for a specified amount of another currency.
 This is called a Forward (rate: F, T)= Payment/delivery at some future date (T> t+2)
 Forward rate used to minimalize risk in hedge funds

Futures: This is the same as a forward but standardized. Forward is more of a unique
contract between the 2 parties, futures is more standard contract

1

,Option: This is a derivative with values on the stock markets  Used to hedge or reduce the
risk.
 Call option: The right to buy FX in the future
 Put option: The right to sell FX in the future

1.3 Exchange rates:
Our quoting convention: The price, in unites of Home Currency (HC), per unit of foreign
currency (FC). So HC/FC

Ex: 1.25USD/EUR  You buy EUR because it is FC. You need 1.25USD for 1EUR
1/(1.25USD/EUR) = 0.8EUR/USD  You buy USD because it is FC. You need 0.8EUR for 1USD.

 Some countries still use weird FC/HC convention:
 USD: NY traders
o Traders need a unique language
o European governments had officially fixed the rate
 GDP: Brits
o The pound used to be intractably nondecimal
o The pound used to play the key role taken by the USD after WWII
 EUR: Everybody
o The EUR used to be “foreign’ even for Eurolanders, because very young

1.4 Bid and Ask rates
 You buy at a bank’s ASK price
 You sell to a bank’s BID price
 Bid-Ask spread = Ask – Bid >= 0
o Ask > Bid
 Bank has the power, transaction costs, commission for risk
o Determinants of bid-ask spread
 Retail: Spread falls with the order size  Bigger order size, less spread
 Wholesale: Spread falls when risk of posting a quote is lower

Ex: USD/EUR: 1.2345-1.2347  ASK:1.2347 and BID:1.2345
 Buying at 47 is like paying midpoint (46) + cost
 Selling at 45 is like paying midpoint (46) – cost

Ex. RUB/USD: 35-36
 When you arrive in Russia you get 35RUB for 1 USD
 When you leave in Russia you pay 36RUB for 1USD

1.5 Bid price higher than Ask price?
Possible
 Call this arbitrage opportunity
 Bid price above ask rate; Huge risk-free profits
 You buy at the ask and resell immediately at the higher bid price
 So this is profit with no risk


2

,Primary and cross rate:
 Primary rate is against a reference or base currency: USD
 Cross rate between 2 non-base currencies: not involving USD
o Bv GBP/EUR
 GBP/USD x USD/EUR
o Higher costs because more transactions

Example: EUR/GBP is what we want
so we need to EUR/USD x USD/GBP

USD/EUR  1/(USD/EUR) = EUR/USD

EUR/USD: 1.0152 (ask) – 1.0134 (bid)
USD/GBP: 1.7019 (bid) – 1.7936 (ask)

EUR/GDP (bid) = EUR/USD (bid) x USD/GDP (bid) = 1.0134 x 1.7019 = 1.7250 (bid)
EUR/GDP (ask) = EUR/USD (ask) x USD/GDP (ask) = 1.0152 x 1.7936 = 1.7295 (ask)

Measuring a change in exchange rate for the HC:
 If s > 0  the Foreign currency has appreciated
 If s < 0  The foreign currency has depreciated
 Example HC/FC
o In June: EUR/USD = 0.875
o In December: EUR/USD = 0.9504
0.9503−0.875
 Percentage change in exchange rate: =0.086
0.875
This means the dollar appreciated with 8.6% against the euro over a period of
six months

1.6 What mechanisms help enforcing the LOP
LOP or Law of One Price

In frictionless markets, 2 securities with the same Cashflow must have the same price
 Arbitrage (2 currencies)
o Buy low and sell immediately higher without risk
o Opportunity because no net investment, no chance of loss, and only possibly
a gain
o Too nice to be true: Self-destructive
 Shopping around (3 currencies)


Ex.
You buy at Citibank for 1.65 and sell at Morgan Chase for 1.6501



You buy at X for 58 and sell with Y for 60


3

, NY: USD/AUD = 0.5295 – 0.5293

=> So you buy AUD in Sydney for 0.5280 and sell it in NY for 0.5293  Risk free profit of
0.0013
For 20milj AUD you make 20 000 000 x 0.0013 = 26 000 profit

Buy 20milj AUD in Sydney, you need 10,56milj USD (20milj AUD x 0,5280). This 20milj AUD
you sell in NY (20milj AUD x 0.5293) and receive 10,586milj USD. So 26 000USD profit

=> If we now want to buy USD, than USD is de Foreign Currency
NY AUD/USD: 1.8885-1.8890
SY 1/(USD/AUD): 1.89-1.896

So we buy 20milj USD in NY (because lowest ask price between NY and SY)  You need
20milj USD x 1.8890 AUD/USD = 37.78Milj AUD necessary

This 20milj USD you are going to sell in SY against higher bid price (1.8930)
20MIL USD X 1.8930 AUD/USD = 37.87MILJ AUD.
So you receive 37.78milj AUD and payed 37.78milj AUD
 Make a profit of 0.08Milj AUD

Exc 12:
 So we calculated JPY/AUD based on 2 currencies
JPY/USD x USD/AUD
 Need to AUD/USD turn around
0.6053-0.6050

Om JPY/AUDbid = JPY/USDbid x USD/AUDbid
= 110.25 x 0.6050 = 66.7

Om JPY/AUDask = JPY/USDask x USD/AUDask
= 111.10 x 0.6053 =67v cvc

So arbitrage because we can buy at 67.25 JPY/AUD and sell at 68.30 in Sydney

Profit is 1.05 or (68.30-67.25)/67.25 = 1.56% (N-O)/O

1.7 Triangular Arbitrage and the LOP:
Triangular (3 currencies): Relations between spot rates quoted in various currencies.

Solve? Take 2 rate together and compare it with the other one
Ex; GBP/USD, JPY/USD, JPY/GBP
 JPY/USD x (1/(GBP/USD))  This rate we compare with JPY/GBP given
 This creation of non existing rate is called “SYNTHETIC SPREAD”


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