International Finance

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International Finance

Lecture 4

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International Finance
Course topics Foundations of International Financial Management World Financial Markets and Institutions Foreign Exchange Exposure Financial Management for a Multinational Firm

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World Financial Markets and Institutions


International Banking and Money Market

International Bond Market


International Equity Markets Futures and Options on Foreign Exchange Currency and Interest Rate Swaps International Portfolio Investment

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International Banking and Money Market


_____________ Banking International Money Market International Debt Crises

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International Banking
What are the main business activities of banks and near

banks? How do they make a profit?

International banks

Take deposits, issue loans denominated in different ________, facilitate ___________trade, and trade currencies Rapid growth in international banking 1.Rapid growth of international ___________ 2.Banks abroad can pursue activities not ___________in home country 3.Tap into Eurodollar market
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Canadian banking industry


The banking industry includes 19 ___________banks,

23 ___________bank subsidiaries and 21 foreign bank ___________operating in Canada. In total, these institutions manage almost $1.8 trillion in assets. More details at Canadian Bankers Association webpage, including how Schedule I, II, and III banks differ from each other.

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The big six


Bank of Montreal

http://www.bmo.com/ The Bank of Nova Scotia http://www.scotiabank.ca/ CIBC http://www.cibc.com/ National Bank of Canada http://www.nbc.ca Royal Bank of Canada http://www.royalbank.com Toronto-Dominion Bank http://www.td.com

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International focus of the Big Six

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Schedule II Banks in Canada

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Ten Largest U.S. Banks

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Types of International Banking Offices


Correspondent bank

Representative office
Foreign branch Subsidiary and affiliate bank

Edge Act Banks (in the USA)


Offshore banking center

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International Banking Offices


Correspondent bank
i.e. two banks maintain a correspondent bank account with each other. Service: mostly currency conversions, additionally, _______________________________________ on the correspondent bank.

Representative office
If one or more important clients for a domestic bank are located overseas, the bank may send an ___________with a cell phone and a computer to work in that foreign country and offer service to the banks clients. Extra service: _______________________________________________.

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Foreign Branches
A foreign branch bank operates like a local bank, but is

legally part of the the parent. Subject to both the banking regulations of ___________country and ___________country. Can provide a much fuller range of services than a representative office. Foreign branches are not subject to Canadian ___________requirements or deposit insurance Branch Banks are the most popular way for Canadian banks to expand overseas. (USA, Europe, shell branches in offshore centers).
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International Banking Offices


Subsidiary and Affiliate Banks

A ___________bank is a locally incorporated bank wholly or partly owned by a foreign parent. An ___________bank is one that is partly owned but not controlled by the parent. Canadian parent banks like foreign subsidiaries because they allow Canadian banks to underwrite securities. Edge Act Banks In the U.S., Edge Act banks are federally chartered subsidiaries of U.S. banks that are physically located in the U.S. that are ___________to engage in a full range of international banking activities.
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Offshore Banking Centers


An offshore banking

banking system is organized to permit external accounts beyond the ___________scope of local economic activity. The host country usually grants complete freedom from host-country governmental banking regulations.
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center is a country whose

The IMF recognizes as

major _______ banking centers: the Bahamas Bahrain the Cayman Islands Hong Kong the Netherlands Antilles Panama Singapore

Cost of Banking Crises in Other Countries

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International Banking Regulation

International bank crises, along with the regulation (bad) experience in ___________, suggests that regulation often ___________. In many banking crises, the existence of government safety net increases moral ___________incentives and regulatory ___________makes things worse. Problems in regulating international banking
1. 2. Lack of knowledge or ability to closely monitor bank operations in other countries Hard to identify which agency is responsible

Trend: cooperation and standardization of regulatory ___________ (i.e. Basel Accord)


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Capital Adequacy Standards


Bank capital adequacy refers to the amount of equity

___________and other securities a bank holds as reserves. The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) and the 1988 and 2003 Basel Accords are a key part of the international institutions and standards that govern how much bank capital is enough to ensure the safety and soundness of the banking system.

www.bis.org

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Calculating capital requirements


First Bank
Assets Reserves Canada securities Loans to other banks Municipal bonds Residential mortgages Commercial loans Consumer loans Fixed assets $3 m $10 m $7 m $10 m $10 m $20 m $35 m $5 m Liabilities Chequable deposits Nontransactions deposits Borrowings Loan loss reserves Bank capital $20 m $60 m $11 m $2 m $7 m

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Calculating capital requirements


We will introduce two forms of Bank Capital requirements

The first type is based on the so-called leverage ratio:

Leverage Ratio = Equity Capital/Assets Well ___________: a banks leverage ratio must exceed 5%. Is First Bank well capitalized?
Risk-based capital requirements (from the Basel 1988

Accord): assets are allocated into four categories, each with a different weight to reflect the degree of credit risk
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Calculating capital requirements


1st category: zero weight, reserves and government securities in OECD countries 2nd category: 20% weight, claims on banks in OECD countries 3rd category: 50% weight, municipal bonds and residential mortgages 4th category: 100% weight, debts of consumers and corporations Off-balance-sheet activities are treated in a similar manner Banks must hold as capital at least 8% of their riskweighted assets.
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Calculating capital requirements


Is First Bank well-capitalized according to Risk-

based capital requirements?

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Capital Adequacy Standards


While traditional bank capital standards may be enough

to protect depositors from traditional credit risk, they may not be sufficient protection from derivative risk. For example, Barings Bank, which collapsed in 1995 from derivative losses, looked good on paper relative to capital adequacy standards. Value at Risk (VaR) models provide a ___________ measurement of capital adequacy.

www.riskmetrics.com
We will deal with VaR later in the course. Idea of using

value at risk: compare VaR with bank capital

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International Money Markets

Money Markets Defined 1. Money market ___________are usually sold in large denominations 2. They have ___________default risk 3. They mature in one year ___________from their issue date Investors in Money Market: Provides a place for warehousing surplus funds for short periods of time

Borrowers find that money market provides low-cost source of temporary funds
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Money Market Instruments


Treasury ___________

___________Funds
Repurchase ___________ ___________Certificates of Deposit

Commercial Paper
Bankers ___________ International Money Market Instruments

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International Money Market


Eurocurrency Market

___________
Forward Rate Agreement ___________

Eurocommercial paper

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International Money Market


Eurocurrency is a

international bank located in a country different than the country that issued the currency. For example, Eurodollars are U.S. dollardenominated time deposits in banks located ___________. Euroyen are ___________-denominated time deposits in banks located outside of Japan. A deposit ___________ have to be located in Europe.

___________deposit in an

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Eurocurrency Market
Most Eurocurrency transactions are interbank

transactions in the amount of $1,000,000 and up. Common reference rates include LIBOR the London Interbank ___________Rate PIBOR the Paris Interbank ___________Rate SIBOR the ___________Interbank Offered Rate A new reference rate for the new euro currency EURIBOR the rate at which interbank time deposits of are offered by one prime bank to another. View Eurodollar deposit rates the Federal Reserve
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Eurocredits
Eurocredits are ___________to medium-term loans of

Eurocurrency by Eurobanks to corporations, sovereign governments, and nonprime banks. The loans are denominated in currencies other than the ___________currency of the Eurobank. Often the loans are too large for one bank to underwrite; a number of banks form a ___________to share the risk of the loan. Eurocredits feature an adjustable rate. On Eurocredits originating in London the base rate is LIBOR.

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Eurocredits
Comparison of US lending and borrowing rates with Eurodollar rates on August 19, 2002

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Rolling over debt


Short-term financing = exposure to interest rate risk.

Teltrex International borrows $3,000,000 at LIBOR plus a

lending margin percent per annum on a 3-month rollover basis. Current LIBOR is 5 17/32 percent. What is the effective annual interest rate on borrowing?

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Rolling over debt


If LIBOR stays the same for the first 3 months and

then changes to 5 1/8 percent, what is the new effective annual rate, and what is the cost of financing for Teltrex International during the first six months?

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Forward Rate Agreements


Recall, short-term financing/investment = exposure to

___________rate risk. Banks use FRA to hedge this risk. FRA is an interbank ___________ that involves two parties, a buyer and a seller. The buyer agrees to pay the seller the excess interest rate on a notional amount above a floating rate (e.g., LIBOR). The seller agrees to _____ the buyer the excess interest rate on a notional amount above the agreed rate, Rfix . Forward Rate Agreements can be used to: Hedge assets that a bank currently owns against interest rate risk. Speculate on the future course of interest rates.
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Forward Rate Agreements


Interest Rate

Time line
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Forward Rate Agreements


In theory ___________could be made at time T2. At that

time, based on the notional amount L and number of days T2 - T1 : If RT1T2 < Rfixed, Bank 1 could pay to Bank 2 the agreed ___________rate Rfixed, and receive from Bank 2 the variable rate RT1T2. This never happens; instead Bank 1 just pays the __________ (Rfixed - RT1T2) to Bank 2. If RT1T2 > Rfixed, Bank 2 could pay to Bank 1 the agreed fixed rate Rfixed, and receive from Bank 2 the variable rate RT1T2. This never happens; instead Bank 2 just pays the difference (RT1T2 - Rfixed) to Bank 1.
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Forward Rate Agreements


In practice Payment L*|Rfixed - RT1T2|*(T2 - T1)/360 is _________

to time T1 and paid at time T1, since the rate is known at T1 and no real need to wait until T2, unless the contract allows for reference rate variability between T1 and T2 Payment under standard FRA is calculated as follows

PAYOFFFRA

L Rfixed RT 1T 2 (T2 T1 ) / 360 1 RT 1T 2 (T2 T1 ) / 360

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Forward Rate Agreements


The reference rate Rfixed is normally set at todays level of

forward rate FT1T2. Continuously compounded Forward rate, ___________ FT1T2 = (RT2*T2-RT1*T1)/(T2-T1) For example, you observe 6-month LIBOR=5.39% and 3month LIBOR=5.36%, both continuously compounded, you know that there are 91 days to maturity for 3-month rate and 182 days until maturity for 6-month LIBOR Forward rate F91182 =
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Forward Rate Agreements


Assume that today Bank 1 buys a FRA with notional

amount $3,000,000 from Bank 2 and fixed rate 5.42% per annum. The FRA starts in 3 months (91 days) and will last for 3 more month, until day 180. No payments are made at this point, but Bank 1 has a binding agreement to pay 5.42% p.a. to Bank 2 for 3 months, and Bank 2 has a binding agreement to pay the 3-month LIBOR rate for 3 months between day 91 and 180 to Bank 1, the rate to be determined on Day 91.

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Forward Rate Agreements


If on day 91 the actual 3-month LIBOR=5%, then 5%<5.42% Bank 1 (buyer) pays to Bank 2 (seller)

the difference:

If on day 91 the actual 3-month LIBOR=6%, then 6%>5.42% Bank 2 pays to Bank 1 the difference:

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Forward Rate Agreements


Value of the FRA If forward rate = reference rate, the value is zero If forward rate reference rate, the value is the

discounted payoff assuming the forward rate is realized You need to check whether Rfixed < or > FT1T2 to detrmine profit/loss for long/short position in the FRA.

VFRA

L Rfixed FT 1T 2 (T2 T1 ) / 360 1 RT 2 (T2 / 360)

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Forward Rate Agreements


Example. Now it is day 0 and the FRA specifies that

Rfixed=4%.

Since forward rate > reference rate, expected discounted value of the payoff =

___________

To buy FRA with such specifications, the buyer would have

to pay to the seller ___________as the seller is facing the discounted expected need to make a payment of this amount of money to the buyer
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Euronotes
Euronotes are

group of international investment banks or international commercial banks. They are sold at a ___________from face value and pay back the full face value at maturity. Maturity is typically three to six months. Euro-Medium-Term Notes Typically fixed rate notes issued by a corporation. ___________range from less than a year to about ten years. Euro-MTNs is partially sold on a continuous basis this allows the borrower to raise funds as they are needed.
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___________ notes underwritten by a

Eurocommercial Paper
___________short-term promissory notes

issued by corporations and banks. Placed ___________with the public through a dealer. Maturities typically range from one month to six months. Eurocommercial paper, while typically U.S. dollar denominated, is often of lower quality than U.S. commercial paperas a result yields are ___________.
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Discount basis
Discount securities are quoted on bank discount basis.

rBD
rBD= quoted rate
D discount, D = F face value P - current price

D 360 F t
___________

t days to maturity

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Discount basis
You observe that the quoted bankers acceptance rate is

4.8% and you are considering investment in BA with face value of US$100,000. How much do you have to pay for the BA if it has 150 days to maturity? What is the effective annual rate on this investment?

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International Debt Crisis


Governments issue bonds, just like companies If a foreign company defaults on a bond, what can you do

as a Canadian investor?

At most you could

to sue the company managers. And you will probably never buy that companys bonds again.

___________in that country and try

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International Debt Crisis


In 1970s major world banks wre accepting deposits

from the OPEC countries and Russia (oil dollars that gave rise to the whole Eurodollar market) Large sums of money were invested in bonds or other debt obligations issued by governments of less developed countries LDCs

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International Debt Crisis


Ten Biggest American Bank Lenders to Mexico ($bn, September 30th, 1987)

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Debt-for-Equity Swaps
As part of debt ___________agreements among

the bank lending syndicates and the debtor nations, creditor banks would sell their loans for U.S. dollars at ___________from face value to MNCs desiring to make equity investment in subsidiaries or local firms in the LDCs. A LDC central bank would buy the ___________ from a MNC at a smaller discount than the MNC paid, but in local currency. The MNC would use the ___________to make pre-approved new investment in the LDC that was economically or socially beneficial to the LDC.
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Debt-for-Equity Swap Illustration


International Bank

LDC firm or MNC subsidiary

Equity Investor or MNC

LDC Central Bank


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Recent Banking Crises


Japan. The collapse of the Japanese

motion a downward spiral for the entire Japanese economy and in particular Japanese banks. This put in jeopardy massive amounts of bank loans to corporations. Asia. This crisis followed a period of economic expansion in the region financed by record private capital inflows. Bankers from the G-10 countries actively sought to finance the growth opportunities in Asia by providing businesses with a full range of products and services.
This led to domestic price

___________set in

___________in East Asia, particularly in ______________________.


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Financial Crises
Factors Causing Financial Crises

1. Increase in interest rates 2. Increases in uncertainty 3. Asset market effects on balance sheets Stock market effects on net worth Unanticipated deflation Cash flow effects 4. Bank panics

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