Packing Credit is a pre-shipment credit extended to the exporters to facilitate him for meeting several financial requirements such as purchase of raw materials and its processing, packing, storing and shipping of goods. It is a short term credit available to all exporters. Hence, this is called pre-shipment credit which is essentially working capital finance made available to the exporters to arrange for goods as per the export. It is generally granted in the form of loans or cash credits. It may also be granted in the form of overdraft facilities. The exporter who wants to avail the pre-shipment credit facility should make a formal application to his bank along with the firm contract with the buyer or a copy of the export order or a copy of the letter of credit. Major Types of Packing Credit Pre-shipment finance is available in various forms. Important types of packing credit are Continue reading
International Business Finance
Challenges of International Financial Management
Financial management of a company is a complex process, involving its own methods and procedures. It is made even more complex because of the globalization taking place, which is making the world’s financial and commodity markets more and more integrated. The integration is both across countries as well as markets. Not only the markets, but even the companies are becoming international in their operations and approach. Managers of international firms have to understand the environment in which they function if they are to achieve their objective in maximizing the value of their firms, or the rate of return from foreign operations. The environment consists of: The international financial system, which consists of two segments: the official part represented by the accepted code of behavior by governments comprising the international monetary system, and the private part, which consists of international banks and other multinational financial institutions that participate in the international Continue reading
Predicting Financial Distress and Corporate Failure
The financial failure of a company can have a devastating effect on all seven users of financial statements e.g. present and potential investors, customers, creditors, employees, lenders, the general public, etc. As a result, users of financial statements as indicated previously are interested in predicting not only whether a company will fail, but also when it will fail e.g. to avoid high profile corporate failures at Enron, Arthur Anderson, and WorldCom, etc. Users of financial statements can predict the financial position of an organization using the Altman Z score model, Argenti A score model, and by looking at the financial statements i.e. balance sheet, income statements, and cash flow statements. Business failure is defined as the unfortunate circumstance of a firm’s inability to stay in the business. Business failure occurs when the total liabilities exceed the total assets of a company, as total assets are considered a measure of the Continue reading
Currency Call Options and Put Options
Currency Call Options A currency call option is a contract that gives the buyer the right to buy a foreign currency at a specified price during the prescribed period. Firms buy call options because they anticipate that the spot rate of the underlying currency will appreciate. Currency option trading can take place for hedging or speculation. Hedging: Multinational companies with open positions in foreign currencies can utilize currency call options. For example, suppose that an American firm orders industrial equipment form a Indian company, and its payment is to be made in Indian Rupees upon delivery. An Indian rupee call option call option lacks in the rate at which the U.S company can purchase Rupees for Dollars. Such an exchange between the two currencies at the specified strike price can take place before the settlement date. Thus the call option specifies the maximum price which the U.S. company must pay Continue reading
Gains from International Trade and Investment
The major gain of international trade is that it has brought about increased prosperity by allowing nations to specialize in producing those goods and services at which they are relatively efficient. The relative efficiency of a country in producing a particular product can be described in terms of the amounts of other, alternative products that could be produced by the same inputs. When considered this way, relative efficiencies are described as the comparative advantages. All nations can do simultaneously gain from exploiting their comparative advantages, as well as from the large-scale production and broader choice of products that are made possible by the international trade. Suppose that Japan is relatively more efficient in producing steel than food and the United States is relatively more efficient in producing food than steel. So we can expect food to be cheap relative to steel in United States, and steel to be cheap relative Continue reading
Factors That Affect Currency Values
To date, there is no exchange rate model that can predict future currency prices with 100% accuracy. In rapidly growing global foreign exchange markets, currency movements become harder to predict as more participants enter the market on a daily basis, bringing with them all their research opinions, emotions, and expectations about where currencies should be headed. Currency movements in the short term can be influenced by publicly available information like the release of the country’s gross domestic product data, the consumer price index, or employment data. The following publicly available information can have immediate impact on currency movements: Local economic data releases and the anticipation of those releases. Economic data releases in foreign countries, especially of major trading partners, and the anticipation of those releases. Central banks, such as the U.S. Federal Reserve or the European Central Bank, raising or lowering interest rates. Central banks making public their thoughts on Continue reading