In November 2014, an American investor buys 1,000 shares in a Mexican company at a price of 500 pesos each. The share does not pay any dividend. A year later she sells the shares for 550 pesos each. The exchange rates when she buys the stock are shown in Table 27.1. Suppose that the exchange rate at the time of sale is 16.5 pesos = $1.
a. How many dollars does she invest?
b. What is her total return in pesos? In dollars?
c. Do you think that she has made an exchange rate profit or loss? Explain.
Table 27.1:
Forward Rate Abbreviation Spot Rate 1 Month 3 Month 1 Year Europe: Euro EUR or € 1.2413 1.2416 1.2421 1.2463 Sweden (krona) SEK 7.4567 7.4561 7.4551 7.4433 CHF 0.9684 0.9681 Switzerland (franc) United Kingdom (pound) GBP or £ Americas: Brazil (real) 0.9673 0.9621 1.5678 1.5674 1.5667 1.5634 BRL 2.5218 2.5449 2.5874 2.7858 Canada (dollar) Mexico (peso) CAD 1.1228 1.1236 1.1253 1.1327 MXN 13.6083 13.6375 13.6823 13.9248 Pacific/Middle East/Africa: Australia (dollar) AUD 1.1516 1.1544 1.1593 1.1297 HKD 7.7573 7.7573 7.7573 7.7573 Hong Kong (dollar) India (rupee) Japan (yen) South Africa (rand) INR 61.8 62.215 63.025 66.3775 JPY or ¥ 117.565 117.541 117.429 116.903 ZAR 10.9308 10.9901 11.0976 11.6194 South Korea (won) KRW 1113.9 1115.5 1118 1123.2
> What effect will each of the following have on the cash cycle? a. The inventory turnover falls from 80 to 60 days. b. Customers are given a larger discount for cash transactions. c. The firm adopts a policy of reducing accounts payable. d. The firm st
> If a firm pays its bills with a 30-day delay, what fraction of its purchases will be paid in the current quarter? In the following quarter? What if the delay is 60 days?
> A firm is considering several policy changes to increase sales. It plans to increase the variety of goods it keeps in inventory, but this will increase inventory by $100,000. It will offer more liberal sales terms, but this will result in receivables inc
> What is the most common form of ownership of corporations worldwide?
> Abbreviated financial statements for Archimedes Levers are shown in Table 29.13 on the next page. If sales increase by 10% in 2017 and all other items, including debt, increase correspondingly, what must be the balancing item? What will be it
> After a record harvest, grain silos are full to the brim. Are storage costs likely to be high or low? What does this imply for the net convenience yield?
> In fiscal 2012 and 2013, Caterpillar’s financial statements included the following items. What was Caterpillar’s cash cycle? $ Millions 2012 2013 Inventory $15,547 $12,625 Receivables 20,113 18,729 Payables 14,969
> This question reviews some of the difficulties encountered in interpreting accounting numbers. a. Give four examples of important assets, liabilities, or transactions that may not be shown on the company’s books. b. How does investment in intangible as
> Look again at the balance sheet for Geomorph in Problem 10. Suppose that at year-end Geomorph had $30 in cash and marketable securities. Immediately after the year-end it used a line of credit to borrow $20 for one year, which it invested in additional m
> Consider this simplified balance sheet for Geomorph Trading: a. Calculate the ratio of debt to equity. b. What are Geomorph’s net working capital and total long-term capital? Calculate the ratio of debt to total long-term capital.
> Magic Flutes has total receivables of $3,000, which represent 20 days’ sales. Total assets are $75,000. The firm’s operating profit margin is 5%. Find the firm’s sales-to-assets ratio and return on assets.
> A firm has a long-term debt–equity ratio of .4. Shareholders’ equity is $1 million. Current assets are $200,000, and total assets are $1.5 million. If the current ratio is 2.0, what is the ratio of debt to total long-term capital?
> Keller Cosmetics maintains an operating profit margin of 8% and a sales-to-assets ratio of 3. It has assets of $500,000 and equity of $300,000. Interest payments are $30,000 and the tax rate is 35%. a. What is the return on assets? b. What is the retur
> There are no universally accepted definitions of financial ratios, but five of the following ratios are clearly incorrect. Substitute the correct definitions. a. Debt–equity ratio = (long-term debt + value of leases)/(long-term debt + value of leases +
> German banks often control a large fraction of the shareholder votes for German businesses. How do they get that voting power?
> Look again at Table 28.10. At the end of fiscal 2014, Starbucks had 748 million shares outstanding with a share price of $81.25. The company’s weighted average cost of capital was about 9%. Calculate: a. Market value added.
> Look again at Table 28.10. Calculate a common-size balance sheet and income statement for Starbucks. Table 28.10: End of Year Start of Year Balance Sheet Assets Current assets: $ 1,844 $ 3,234 Cash and marketable securities Ac
> Residents of the northeastern United States suffered record-setting low temperatures throughout November and December 2024. Spot prices of heating oil rose 25% to over $7 a gallon. a. What effect did this have on the net convenience yield and on the rela
> Table 28.10 gives abbreviated balance sheets and income statements for Starbucks. Calculate the following using balance-sheet figures from the start of the year: a. Return on assets. b. Operating profit margin. c. Sales-to-assets ratio. d.
> Construct a balance sheet for Galactic Enterprises given the following data: Cash balances………….…………..……………$25,000 Inventories……………………………………… $30,000 Net plant and equipment…………………..$140,000 Accounts receivable…….…………...…………$35,000 Accounts payable…………………
> Take another look at Geomorph Trading’s balance sheet in Problem 10 and consider the following additional information: The “R&R reserve” covers the future costs of removal of an oil pipeline and e
> Sometimes analysts use the average of capital at the start and end of the year to calculate return on capital. Provide some examples to illustrate when this does and does not make sense.
> We noted that, when calculating EVA, you should calculate income as the sum of the after-tax interest payment and net income. Why do you need to deduct the tax shield? Would an alternative be to use a different measure of the cost of capital? Or would yo
> Suppose that you wish to use financial ratios to estimate the risk of a company’s stock. Which of those that we have described in this chapter are likely to be helpful? Can you think of other accounting measures of risk?
> How would rapid inflation affect the accuracy and relevance of a manufacturing company’s balance sheet and income statement? Does your answer depend on how much debt the firm has issued?
> If you buy a nine-month T-bill future, you undertake to buy a $1 million three-month bill in nine months’ time. Suppose that Treasury bills and notes currently offer the following yields: Months to Maturity.....................Annual Yield 3...
> Here are some data for five companies in the same industry: You have been asked to calculate a measure of times-interest-earned for the industry. Discuss the possible ways that you might calculate such a measure. Does changing the method of calculation m
> As you can see, someone has spilled ink over some of the entries in the balance sheet and income statement of Transylvania Railroad (Table 28.11). Can you use the following information to work out the missing entries? (Note: For this problem,
> Sara Togas sells all its output to Federal Stores. The following table shows selected financial data, in millions, for the two firms: Calculate the sales-to-assets ratio, the operating profit margin, and the return on assets for the two firms. Now assum
> The following table shows interest rates and exchange rates for the U.S. dollar and the Lilliputian nano. The spot exchange rate is 15 nanos = $1. Complete the missing entries: 1 Month 3 Months 1 Year Dollar intere
> How would the following actions affect a firm’s current ratio? a. Inventory is sold. b. The firm takes out a bank loan to pay its suppliers. c. The firm arranges a line of credit with a bank that allows it to borrow at any time to pay its suppliers. d
> Suppose that a firm has both fixed-rate and floating-rate debt outstanding. What effect will a decline in interest rates have on the firm’s times-interest-earned ratio? What about the ratio of the market value of debt to that of equity? Would you judge t
> Discuss alternative measures of financial leverage. Should the market value of equity be used or the book value? Is it better to use the market value of debt or the book value? How should you treat off-balance-sheet obligations such as pension liabilitie
> Describe some alternative measures of a firm’s overall performance. What are their advantages and disadvantages? In each case discuss what benchmarks you might use to judge whether performance is satisfactory.
> True or false? a. A company’s debt–equity ratio is always less than 1. b. The quick ratio is always less than the current ratio. c. The return on equity is always less than the return on assets.
> On average, it takes Microlimp’s customers 60 days to pay their bills. If Microlimp has annual sales of $500 million, what is the average value of unpaid bills?
> Do Japanese investors play an important role in corporate financial policy and governance? If not, could they?
> Airlux Antarctica has current assets of $300 million, current liabilities of $200 million and a crash—sorry—cash ratio of .05. How much cash and marketable securities does it hold?
> A firm in the United States is due to receive payment of €1 million in eight years’ time. It would like to protect itself against a decline in the value of the euro, but finds it difficult to get forward cover for such a long period. Is there any other w
> A U.S. company has committed to pay 10 million kronor to a Swedish company in one year. What is the cost (in present value) of covering this liability by buying kronor forward? The Swedish interest rate is .6%, and exchange rates are shown in TableÂ
> In March 1997, the exchange rate for the Indonesian rupiah was R2,419 = $1. Inflation in the year to March 1998 was about 30% in Indonesia and 2% in the United States. a. If purchasing power parity held, what should have been the nominal exchange rate i
> “Northern Refineries does not avoid risk by selling oil futures. If prices stay above $2.40 a gallon, then it will actually have lost by selling oil futures at that price.” Is this a fair comment?
> Define each of the following theories in a sentence or simple equation: a. Interest rate parity. b. Expectations theory of forward rates. c. Purchasing power parity. d. International capital market equilibrium (relationship of real and nominal intere
> Look at Table 27.1. a. How many Japanese yen do you get for your dollar? b. What is the one-month forward rate for yen? c. Is the yen at a forward discount or premium on the dollar? d. Use the one-year forward rate to calculate the annual
> Alpha and Omega are U.S. corporations. Alpha has a plant in Hamburg that imports components from the United States, assembles them, and then sells the finished product in Germany. Omega is at the opposite extreme. It also has a plant in Hamburg, but it b
> Carpet Baggers, Inc., is proposing to construct a new bagging plant in a country in Europe. The two prime candidates are Germany and Switzerland. The forecasted cash flows from the proposed plants are as follows: The spot exchange rate for euros is $1.3/
> “Last year we had a substantial income in sterling, which we hedged by selling sterling forward. In the event sterling appreciated. So our decision to sell forward cost us a lot of money. I think that in the future we should either stop hedging our curre
> What is a keiretsu? Give a brief description.
> Table 27.5 shows the annual interest rate (annually compounded) and exchange rates against the dollar for different currencies. Are there any arbitrage opportunities? If so, how would you secure a positive cash flow today, while zeroing out a
> You have bid for a possible export order that would provide a cash inflow of €1 million in six months. The spot exchange rate is $1.3549 = €1 and the six-month forward rate is $1.3620 = €1. There are two sources of uncertainty: (1) the euro could apprec
> A Ford dealer in the United States may be exposed to a devaluation of the yen if this leads to a cut in the price of Japanese cars. Suppose that the dealer estimates that a 1% decline in the value of the yen would result in a permanent decline of 5% in t
> Companies may be affected by changes in the nominal exchange rate or in the real exchange rate. Explain how this can occur. Which changes are easiest to hedge against?
> Exacta, s.a. Exacta, s.a., is a major French producer, based in Lyons, of precision machine tools. About two thirds of its output is exported. The majority of these sales is within the European Union. However, the company also has a thriving business in
> Suppose you are the treasurer of Lufthansa, the German international airline. How is company value likely to be affected by exchange rate changes? What policies would you adopt to reduce exchange rate risk?
> Penny Farthing, the treasurer of International Bicycles, Inc., has noticed that the interest rate in Japan is below the rates in most other countries. She is, therefore, suggesting that the company should make an issue of Japanese yen bonds. Does this ma
> Look at Table 27.1. If the three-month interest rate on dollars is 0.2%, what do you think is the three-month interest rate on the Brazilian real? Explain what would happen if the rate were substantially above your figure. Table 2
> Table 27.1 shows the 90-day forward rate on the South African rand. a. Is the dollar at a forward discount or premium on the rand? b. What is the annual percentage discount or premium? c. If you have no other information about the two curr
> Why are pyramids common in many countries but not in the United States or United Kingdom?
> It is the year 2021 and Pork Barrels Inc. is considering construction of a new barrel plant in Spain. The forecasted cash flows in millions of euros are as follows: The spot exchange rate is $1.2 = €1. The interes
> Suppose that in 2023 one- and two-year interest rates are 5.2% in the United States and 1.0% in Japan. The spot exchange rate is ¥120.22/$. Suppose that one year later interest rates are 3% in both countries, while the value of the yen has appreciated to
> An importer in the United States is due to take delivery of clothing from Mexico in six months. The price is fixed in Mexican pesos. Which of the following transactions could eliminate the importer’s exchange risk? a. Sell six-month call options on peso
> Phillip’s Screwdriver Company has borrowed $20 million from a bank at a floating interest rate of 2 percentage points above three-month Treasury bills, which now yield 5%. Assume that interest payments are made quarterly and that the entire principal of
> Your investment bank has an investment of $100 million in the stock of the Swiss Roll Corporation and a short position in the stock of the Frankfurter Sausage Company. Here is the recent price history of the two stocks: On the evidence of these six mo
> “Speculators want futures contracts to be incorrectly priced; hedgers want them to be correctly priced.” Why?
> Yesterday you sold six-month futures on the German DAX stock market index at a price of 9,120. Today the DAX closed at 9,100 and DAX futures closed at 9,140. You get a call from your broker, who reminds you that your futures position is marked to market
> Is a total return swap on a bond the same as a credit default swap? Why or why not?
> Consider the commodities and financial assets listed in Table 26.5. The risk-free interest rate is 6% a year, and the term structure is flat. a. Calculate the six-month futures price for each case. b. Explain how a magnoosium producer would use a futures
> Petrochemical Parfum (PP) is concerned about a possible increase in the price of heavy fuel oil, which is one of its major inputs. Show how PP can use either options or futures contracts to protect itself against a rise in the price of crude oil. Show ho
> What kind of industries do you think should thrive in a market-based financial system? In a bank-based system?
> Price changes of two gold-mining stocks have shown strong positive correlation. Their historical relationship is Average percentage change in A = .001 + .75 (percentage change in B) Changes in B explain 60% of the variation of the changes in A (R2 = .6).
> Legs Diamond owns shares in a Vanguard Index 500 mutual fund worth $1 million on July 15. (This is an index fund that tracks the Standard and Poor’s 500 Index.) He wants to cash in now, but his accountant advises him to wait six months so as to defer a l
> A gold-mining firm is concerned about short-term volatility in its revenues. Gold currently sells for $1,300 an ounce, but the price is extremely volatile and could fall as low as $1,220 or rise as high as $1,380 in the next month. The company will bring
> What is meant by “delta” (δ) in the context of hedging? Give examples of how delta can be estimated or calculated.
> Securities A, B, and C have the following cash flows: a. Calculate their durations if the interest rate is 8%. b. Suppose that you have an investment of $10 million in A. What combination of B and C would hedge this investment against interest rate c
> In September 2020 swap dealers were quoting a rate for five-year euro interest rate swaps of 4.5% against Euribor (the short-term interest rate for euro loans). Euribor at the time was 4.1%. Suppose that A arranges with a dealer to swap a €10 million fiv
> The following table shows 2014 gold futures prices for varying contract lengths. Gold is predominantly an investment good, not an industrial commodity. Investors hold gold because it diversifies their portfolios and because they hope its price will rise.
> Why is transparency important in a market-based financial system? Why is it less important in a bank-based system?
> Banks are not the only financial intermediary from which corporations can obtain financing. What are the other intermediaries? How much financing do they supply, relative to banks, in the United Kingdom, Germany, and Japan?
> Agency problems are inevitable. That is, we can never expect managers to give 100% weight to shareholders’ interests and none to their own. a. Why not? b. List the mechanisms that are used around the world to keep agency problems under control.
> What is tunneling? Why does the threat of tunneling impede the development of financial markets?
> What is meant by the German system of codetermination?
> In December 2014, 6-month futures on the Australian S&P/ASX 200 Index traded at 5,376. Spot was 5,442. The interest rate was 2.5%, and the dividend yield was about 4.7%. Were the futures fairly priced?
> Which countries have a. The largest stock markets? b. The largest bond markets? c. The smallest direct holdings of shares by individual investors? d. The largest holdings of bank deposits by individual investors? e. The largest holdings of shares by
> What are some of the advantages and disadvantages of Japanese keiretsu’s?
> “Privatization appears to bring efficiency gains because public companies are better able to reduce agency costs.” Why do you think this may (or may not) be true?
> True or false? a. Hedging transactions in an active futures market have zero or slightly negative NPVs. b. When you buy a futures contract, you pay now for delivery at a future date. c. The holder of a financial futures contract misses out on any dividen
> We described carried interest as an option. What kind of option? How does this option change incentives in a private-equity partnership? Can you think of circumstances where these incentive changes would be perverse, that is, potentially value-destroying
> Explain the structure of a private-equity partnership. Pay particular attention to incentives and compensation. What types of investment were such partnerships designed to make?
> Read Barbarians at the Gate (Further Reading). What agency costs can you identify? Do you think the LBO was well-designed to reduce these costs?
> The Sealed Air leveraged restructuring is described in the Chapter 18 Beyond the Page feature. Outline the similarities and differences between the RJR Nabisco LBO and the Sealed Air restructuring. Were the economic motives the same? Were the results the
> True, false, or “It depends on. . .”? a. Carve-out or spin-off of a division improves incentives for the division’s managers. b. Private-equity partnerships have limited lives. The main purpose is to force the general partners to seek out quick payback
> True or false? a. When a company becomes bankrupt, it is usually in the interests of stockholders to seek a liquidation rather than a reorganization. b. In Chapter 11 a reorganization plan must be presented for approval by each class of creditor. c. In
> Private-equity partnerships have a limited term. What are the advantages of this arrangement?
> Phoenix Motors wants to lock in the cost of 10,000 ounces of platinum to be used in next quarter’s production of catalytic converters. It buys three-month futures contracts for 10,000 ounces at a price of $1,300 per ounce. a. Suppose the spot price of pl
> What advantages have been claimed for public conglomerates?
> True or false? a. One of the first tasks of an LBO’s financial manager is to pay down debt. b. Once an LBO or MBO goes private, it almost always stays private. c. Targets for LBOs in the 1980s tended to be profitable companies in mature industries. d
> Table 26.4 contains spot and six-month futures prices for several commodities and financial instruments. There may be some money-making opportunities. See if you can find them, and explain how you would trade to take advantage of them. The interest rate
> Define the following terms: a. LBO b. MBO c. Spin-off d. Carve-out e. Asset sale f. Privatization g. Leveraged restructuring
> We described several problems with Chapter 11 bankruptcy. Which of these problems could be mitigated by negotiating a prepackaged bankruptcy?
> For what kinds of firm would an LBO or MBO transaction not be productive?