Forum Archive Index - May 2002
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[sharechat] NZ Companies and Hedging
Hi Snoopy,
I thought I'd have a crack at some of the issues you raise.
The counterparty to a NZ Company Hedge will invariably be a bank. In the
case of a forward contract we a talking about an agreement to buy / sell
currency at a future date at a price agreed on today where the price is
simply spot +/- an interest adjustment. For a NZ importer (ie a NZD/USD
seller) the forward points are negative because NZ interest rates are higher
than US interest rates. If it wants to hedge using a forward contract one
year out it will approach a bank and enter into an agreement to sell NZD to
the bank in one year (and receive USD). No funds change hands between the
two at this point. However, the bank won't want to take the risk of having
to deliver USD in one years time at a rate that could potentially be worse
than the prevailing spot rate so it will purchase the USD on the day the
forward contract is arranged. The trouble is the USD it is holding on its
counterparties behalf for a year are only earning say 1.75% interest while
the NZD it just swapped for the USD could have earned say 5.5% interest.
The bank needs to be compensated for this so the forward rate is less than
the current spot rate by an amount exactly equal to the interest
differential. Note that the NZ Company could have achieved the same result
by borrowing USD and holding them for a year. Because of this ability to
arbitrage the forward points will always be equal to the interest
differential.
Regards,
T100.
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