F_ch11

Another name for operating exposure is ________ exposure.
A) economic
B) competitive
C) strategic
D) all of the above

D

What type of international risk exposure measures the change in present value of a firm resulting from changes in future operating cash flows caused by any unexpected change in exchange rates?
A) transaction exposure
B) accounting exposure
C) operating ex

C

The goal of operating exposure analysis is to identify strategic operating techniques the firm might adopt to enhance value in the face of unanticipated exchange rate changes.

T

________ cash flows arise from intracompany and intercompany receivables and payments while ________ cash flows are payments for the use of loans and equity.
A) Financing; operating
B) Operating; financing
C) Operating; accounting
D) Accounting; financing

B

Operating cash flows may occur in different currencies and at different times, but financing cash flows may occur only in a single currency.

F

Which of the following is NOT an example of a financial cash flow?
A) parent invested equity capital
B) interest on intrafirm lending
C) payment for goods and services
D) intrafirm principal payments

C

Which of the following is NOT an example of an operating cash flow?
A) management fees and distributed overhead
B) royalties and license fees
C) rent and lease payments
D) dividend paid to parent company

D

________ exposure is far more important for the long-run health of a business than changes caused by ________ or ________ exposure.
A) Operating; translation; transaction
B) Transaction; operating; translation
C) Accounting; translation; transaction
D) Tr

A

Expected changes in foreign exchange rates should already be factored into anticipated operating results by management and investors.

T

Under conditions of equilibrium, management would use ________ exchange rate as an unbiased predictor of future spot rates when preparing operating budgets.
A) the current spot
B) the forward rate
C) the black market
D) none of the above

B

Simpson Sign Company based in Frostbite Falls, Minnesota has a 6-month C$100,000 contract to complete sign work in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. The current spot rate is $1.02/C$ and the forward rate is $1.01/C$. Under conditions of equilibrium, management

B

The three main types of foreign exchange risk are
A) operating, transaction, and translation.
B) translation, accounting, and operating.
C) transaction, accounting, and translation.
D) operating, currency, and market.

A

Operating exposure referred to as MEDIUM RUN:EQUILIBRIUM has which of the following set of characteristics?
A) It lasts two to five years, has complete pass-through of exchange rate changes, and existing competitors begin partial responses.
B) It lasts fo

A

Operating exposure
A) creates foreign exchange accounting gains and losses.
B) causes exchange rates to fluctuate.
C) is the possibility that future cash flows will change due to an unexpected change in foreign exchange rates.
D) measures a country's prop

C

An unexpected change in exchange rates impacts a firm's cash flows at what level(s)?
A) short run
B) medium run (equilibrium case)
C) long run
D) all of the above

D

Which of the following is NOT an operating cash flow?
A) intra-firm payable
B) account receivable from an unrelated party
C) interest payment by a subsidiary to a parent company
D) account payable to a foreign subsidiary

C

________ risk measures the change in value of the firm that results from changes in future operating cash flows caused by unexpected changes in exchange rates.
A) Transaction
B) Accounting
C) Operating
D) Translation

C

Which of the following is NOT an example of diversifying operations?
A) diversifying sales
B) diversifying location of operations
C) raising funds in more than one country
D) sourcing raw materials in more than one country

C

Which of the following is NOT an example of diversification in financing?
A) raising funds in more than one market
B) raising funds in more than one country
C) diversifying sales
D) All of the above qualify.

C

Management must be able to predict disequilibria in international markets to take advantage of diversification strategies.

F

When disequilibria in international markets occur, management can take advantage by
A) doing nothing if they are already diversified and able to realize beneficial portfolio effects.
B) recognizing disequilibria faster than purely domestic competitors.
C)

D

Purely domestic firms will be at a disadvantage to MNEs in the event of market disequilibria because
A) domestic firms lack comparative data from its own sources.
B) international firms are already so large.
C) all of the domestic firm's raw materials are

A

Which of the following is NOT an advantage of foreign exchange risk management?
A) the reduction of the variability of cash flows due to domestic business cycles
B) increased availability of capital
C) reduced cost of capital
D) All of the above are poten

D

The primary method by which a firm may protect itself against operating exposure impacts is
A) money market hedges.
B) diversification.
C) forward contract hedges.
D) balance sheet hedging.

B

An advantage of international diversification is the
A) reduction in the variability of future cash flows due to domestic business cycles.
B) increase in the availability of capital.
C) diversification of political risk.
D) all of the above.

D

Diversifying sources of financing, regardless of the currency of denomination, can lower a firm's cost of capital and increase its availability of capital.

T

Which of the following is NOT identified by your authors as a proactive management technique to reduce exposure to foreign exchange risk?
A) matching currency cash flows
B) currency swaps
C) remaining a purely domestic firm
D) parallel loans

C

Which one of the following management techniques is likely to best offset the risk of long-run exposure to receivables denominated in a particular foreign currency?
A) borrow money in the foreign currency in question
B) lend money in the foreign currency

A

Which one of the following management techniques is likely to best offset the risk of long-run exposure to payables denominated in a particular foreign currency?
A) borrow money in the foreign currency in question
B) lend money in the foreign currency in

B

The particular strategy of trying to offset inflows of cash from one country with outflows of cash in the same currency is known as ________.
A) hedging
B) diversification
C) matching
D) balancing

C

Which of the following is NOT an acceptable hedging technique to reduce risk caused by a relatively predictable long-term foreign currency inflow of Japanese yen?
A) Import raw materials from Japan denominated in yen to substitute for domestic suppliers.

C

An MNE has a contract for a relatively predictable long-term inflow of Japanese yen that the firm chooses to hedge by seeking out potential suppliers in Japan. This hedging strategy is referred to as ________.
A) a natural hedge
B) currency-switching
C) m

A

An MNE has a contract for a relatively predictable long-term inflow of Japanese yen that the firm chooses to hedge by paying for imports from Canada in Japanese yen. This hedging strategy is known as ________.
A) a natural hedge
B) currency-switching
C) m

B

A U.S. timber products firm has a long-term contract to import unprocessed logs from Canada. To avoid occasional and unpredictable changes in the exchange rate between the U.S. dollar and the Canadian dollar, the firms agree to split between the two firms

A

A ________ occurs when two business firms in separate countries arrange to borrow each other's currency for a specified period of time.
A) natural hedge loan
B) forward loan
C) currency switch loan
D) back-to-back loan

D

A Canadian firm with a U.S. subsidiary and a U.S. firm with a Canadian subsidiary agree to a parallel loan agreement. In such an agreement, the Canadian firm is making a/an ________ loan to the ________ subsidiary while effectively financing the ________

C

Which of the following is NOT an important impediment to widespread use of parallel loans?
A) difficulty in finding an appropriate counterparty
B) the risk that one of the parties will fail to return the borrowed funds when agreed
C) the process does not

C

A ________ resembles a back-to-back loan except that it does not appear on a firm's balance sheet.
A) forward loan
B) currency hedge
C) counterparty
D) currency swap

D

A ________ is the term used to describe a foreign currency agreement between two parties to exchange a given amount of one currency for another, and after a period of time, to give back the original amounts.
A) matched flow
B) currency swap
C) back-to-bac

B

Currency swaps are exclusively for periods of time under one year.

F

A British firm and a U.S. Corporation each wish to enter into a currency swap hedging agreement. The British firm is receiving U.S. dollars from sales in the U.S. but wants pounds. The U.S. firm is receiving pounds from sales in Britain but wants dollars.

A

Most swap dealers arrange swaps so that each firm that is a party to the transaction does not know who the counterparty is.

T

Most swap dealers arrange swaps so that each firm that is a party to the transaction knows who the counterparty is.

F

Swap agreements are treated as off-balance sheet transactions via U.S. accounting methods.

T

Swap agreements are treated as line items on the balance sheet via U.S. accounting methods.

F

After being introduced in the 1980s, currency swaps have remained a relatively insignificant financial derivative instrument.

F

After being introduced in the 1980s, currency swaps have gained increasing importance as financial derivative instruments.

T

Which of the following is NOT one of the commonly employed financial policies used to manage operating and transaction exposure?
A) use of natural hedges by matching currency cash flows
B) back-to-back or parallel loans
C) currency swaps
D) All of the abo

D

Contractual approaches (i.e., options and forwards) have occasionally been used to hedge operating exposure, but are costly and possibly ineffectual.

T

Which of the following is NOT a proactive policy for managing operating exposure?
A) matching currency of cash flow
B) back-to-back loans
C) cross currency swap agreements
D) All of the above are proactive management policies for operating exposure.

D