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How to protect against FX volatility

As inter­na­tion­al gov­ern­ments begin to unwind post-cred­it cri­sis fis­cal poli­cies, inter­est rates are set to rise.

Wide­spread cur­ren­cy volatil­i­ty has fol­lowed, mean­ing busi­ness­es have had to rethink hedg­ing strate­gies and look more close­ly at how to pro­tect their busi­ness­es.

For com­pa­nies exposed to fluc­tu­at­ing for­eign cur­ren­cies, such as those with a par­tic­u­lar­ly heavy reliance on imports or exports, keep­ing abreast of the like­ly mar­ket trends is essen­tial.

Any com­pa­ny with a core busi­ness activ­i­ty that relies on cur­ren­cy con­ver­sion, in the form of pay­ments to for­eign sup­pli­ers or repa­tri­at­ing inter­na­tion­al rev­enue, should be con­cerned about FX volatil­i­ty

Richard de Meo, man­ag­ing direc­tor of busi­ness for­eign exchange (FX) spe­cial­ists Foenix Part­ners, says: “Any com­pa­ny with a core busi­ness activ­i­ty that relies on cur­ren­cy con­ver­sion, in the form of pay­ments to for­eign sup­pli­ers or repa­tri­at­ing inter­na­tion­al rev­enue, should be con­cerned about FX volatil­i­ty.”

Mr de Meo says the move­ment of cer­tain cur­ren­cy pairs dur­ing the past 12 months has giv­en many of his cus­tomers par­tic­u­lar cause for con­cern.

“GBP/USD has sta­bilised in recent weeks, but after a peak of 1.72 last July this pair­ing fell dra­mat­i­cal­ly to 1.46 in April 2015, equiv­a­lent to 15 per cent in eight months,” he says.

“Sim­i­lar­ly, GBP/EUR has risen from 1.24 in Sep­tem­ber last year to a new sev­en-year high above 1.44 on the back of the Greek debt break­down, which is an increase of over 17 per cent in ten months.”

With busi­ness­es hav­ing already seen con­sid­er­able volatil­i­ty since the start of the year, it is per­haps no sur­prise that fur­ther mea­sures are being tak­en to insu­late cor­po­rates against the ill winds still to come.

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Dollar strength, euro weakness

At the time of writ­ing, the USD index was trad­ing at 12-year highs with the mar­ket prepar­ing for an inter­est rate hike in Sep­tem­ber.

Tobias Davis, cor­po­rate hedg­ing man­ag­er at West­ern Union Busi­ness Solu­tions, says: “This is leav­ing emerg­ing mar­ket cur­ren­cies and the euro/dollar most vul­ner­a­ble as ris­ing rates will lead to a halt in cheap US-dol­lar fund­ing.

“Hedg­ing strate­gies util­is­ing for­wards and options allow busi­ness­es active­ly to mit­i­gate this volatil­i­ty, while pro­tect­ing their mar­gins.”

Clos­er to home, the pound’s rise against the euro has been get­ting plen­ty of cov­er­age. While this may be good news for hol­i­day­mak­ers look­ing for an extra ice cream, it’s doing lit­tle for some busi­ness­es.

David Lamb, head of deal­ing at Fex­co, explains: “The Greek cri­sis had weighed down the euro and the increas­ing like­li­hood of a rise in UK inter­est rates is strength­en­ing the pound.

“With such diver­gent for­tunes on oppo­site sides of the Chan­nel, the sterling/euro pair isn’t so much a tale of a two-speed Europe as one that’s head­ing in oppo­site direc­tions.”

Mr Lamb notes that the con­trast between the Euro­pean Cen­tral Bank’s loose mon­e­tary pol­i­cy and the increas­ing­ly hawk­ish stance being adopt­ed by cen­tral bankers in the UK and the Unit­ed States, where inter­est rates could rise before the end of the year, is also like­ly to cause con­tin­ued ten­sion and exchange rate volatil­i­ty.

With such stark warn­ings from indus­try experts, busi­ness­es are seek­ing out ways to pro­tect them­selves.

FX protection

For those exposed because of the delay between con­tract agree­ment and pay­ment, the eas­i­est option is to offer a dis­count for the ear­ly pay­ment of invoic­es.

Andy Scott, asso­ciate direc­tor of FX advi­so­ry ser­vices at for­eign cur­ren­cy spe­cial­ists, HiFX, says: “If you are con­cerned about your cus­tomers’ abil­i­ty to pay, try and nego­ti­ate pay­ment up front or set up pay­ment in stages.”

Mr Scott says there are a vari­ety of ser­vices avail­able to ease the pres­sure on busi­ness­es.

He explains: “Prod­ucts and ser­vices include shar­ing cred­it risks with the banks in order to assist exporters in the rais­ing of ten­der and con­tract bonds, in access­ing pre and post-ship­ment work­ing cap­i­tal finance and in secur­ing con­fir­ma­tions of let­ters of cred­it.”

Anoth­er sim­ple solu­tion is shop­ping around. Giv­en recent events, com­pa­nies are becom­ing much smarter at find­ing bet­ter exchange rates by com­par­ing their bank’s rate with that of a cur­ren­cy spe­cial­ist.

Hedging risk

For those look­ing at more sophis­ti­cat­ed ways of man­ag­ing the risk, deriv­a­tives con­tracts offer anoth­er way to avoid being stung.

Fexco’s Mr Lamb explains: “Well-run busi­ness­es with a sound approach to risk man­age­ment use for­ward con­tracts to pro­tect their mar­gins from cur­ren­cy volatil­i­ty.

“These allow them to buy cur­ren­cy now with a small deposit – typ­i­cal­ly between 5 and 10 per cent – and lock into a spe­cif­ic exchange rate. They only pay the remain­der when they actu­al­ly need the mon­ey, but the fixed rate pro­tects them against any sharp moves against them in the inter­ven­ing peri­od.”

But even though trea­sury and hedg­ing poli­cies build in some room for judg­ment based on mar­ket con­di­tions, finance direc­tors have been test­ing this flex­i­bil­i­ty to the lim­it in recent months.

Foenix Part­ners’ Mr de Meo adds: “Hedge ratios – the per­cent­age of their cur­ren­cy expo­sure that they actu­al­ly hedge – have been ris­ing dra­mat­i­cal­ly due to fear around volatil­i­ty.”

Of course, small­er com­pa­nies don’t always have the lux­u­ry of sophis­ti­cat­ed hedg­ing process­es. Cur­ren­cy risk hedg­ing tech­niques used by tra­di­tion­al banks can often be com­plex.

Some banks pro­vide bet­ter rates to larg­er cor­po­rates, while small­er com­pa­nies have pre­vi­ous­ly had to pay more or nego­ti­ate com­plex pric­ing struc­tures. The result is that small­er com­pa­nies often choose not to hedge at all.