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Chapter 20 International Financial Management. Scope of Financial Management. Three Sets of Related DecisionsInvestment Decisionswhat activities to financeFinancing Decisions how to finance those activitiesMoney Management Decisionshow to manage financial resources most efficiently. Intern
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2. Chapter 20International Financial Management
3. Scope of Financial Management Three Sets of Related Decisions
Investment Decisions
what activities to finance
Financing Decisions
how to finance those activities
Money Management Decisions
how to manage financial resources most efficiently
4. International Financial Management Complexity of International Business
Investment, financing and money management decisions in international business are complicated by:
different currencies
tax regimes
capital control regulations
financial structure norms
economic and political risk
5. International Financial Management Source of Competitive Advantage
Effective and efficient international financial management can be a source of competitive advantage for a firm by reducing their cost of creating value by:
minimizing the tax burden
minimizing unnecessary risk
(political, economic, foreign exchange)
efficiently managing the cash flows and reserves
6. Scope of Financial Management Three Sets of Related Decisions
Investment Decisions
Financing Decisions
Money Management Decisions
7. Investment Decisions Capital Budgeting
Quantifies the benefits, costs and risks of an investment
Enables managers to reasonably compare different investment alternatives within and across countries
Estimates the project’s cash flows over time
Discounts the cash flows to determine the net present value of the project
8. International Capital Budgeting Complicated Process
Must distinguish between cash flows to project and cash flows to the parent company
Political, economic and foreign exchange risk can change the value of a foreign investment
Connection between cash flows to parent and the source of financing must be recognized
9. Project and Parent Cash Flows Project cash flows may not reach the parent due to:
host-country may block cash-flow repatriation
cash flows may be taxed at an unfavorable rate
host government may require a percentage of cash flows to be reinvested in the host country
When evaluating investments, the parent firm should focus the cash flows it will receive and not what the project generates
10. Adjusting for Political Risk The likelihood that political forces will cause drastic
changes in a country’s business climate that might harm
the profits or goals of the firm
Expropriation (of the firm’s assets)
Political and Social Unrest leads to economic collapse which can render the firm’s assets as worthless
Political Change which can lead to harmful changes in tax policies or exchange controls
11. Adjusting for Economic Risk The likelihood that economic mismanagement will cause drastic changes in the country’ business climate that might harm the profits or goals of the firm
Inflation
Level of Business and Government Debt
12. Risk and Capital Budgeting Typical Process
Treat all risk as a single problem by increasing discount rate to projects in risky countries
Problems
Penalizes early cash flows too much
Penalizes later cash flows too little
Better to revise future cash flows downward to reflect
possible future adverse political or economic risk
13. Scope of Financial Management Three Sets of Related Decisions
Investment Decisions
Financing Decisions
Money Management Decisions
14. Financing Decisions Three Factors to Consider
Will the foreign investment will be internally financed or externally financed ?
(we will assume that it will be external)
What is the source of financing (domestic or global)?
How should the financial structure of the foreign affiliate be configured?
15. Financing Decisions Source of Financing
Global capital markets provide a lower cost of financing due to its increased liquidity
interest rates on the debt loan
expected dividend yield for equity shares
capital gain for equity shares
16. Financing Decisions Problems and Risks of Global Capital Market
Host-country may require projects to be locally financed through debt or equity
limited liquidity may raise the cost of capital
host-government may offer low interest subsidized loans
Impact of local currency (appreciation/depreciation) influences capital and financing decisions
May increase or decrease the actual cost of capital
Borrow debt locally if local currency is expected to weaken
17. Financing Decisions Financial Structure
The mix of debt and equity used to finance the business
Debt/equity ratios vary between countries due to differences in tax regimes or cultural norms
18. Financing Decisions Financial Structure
Should firms follow local capital structure norms?
Easier to evaluate ROE relative to local competitors
Might improve the company’s image
Best recommendation is to adopt a financial structure that minimizes the cost of capital
19. Scope of Financial Management Three Sets of Related Decisions
Investment Decisions
Financing Decisions
Money Management Decisions
20. Global Money Management The process and system that attempts to manage the firm’s
global cash resources (working capital) most efficiently by:
minimizing cash balances
reducing transaction costs
minimizing tax obligations
21. Global Money Management The Efficiency Objective: Minimizing Cash Balances
Money Market Accounts
low interest
high liquidity
Certificates of Deposit
higher interest
lower liquidity
Using a centralized depository will reduce required cash balances in liquid accounts
22. Global Money Management The Efficiency Objective: Reducing Transaction Costs
Transaction Costs
changing from one currency to another
Transfer Fees
fee for moving cash between locations
40% of international trade involves transactions between national subsidiaries of transnational firms
Multilateral netting can reduce such transactions
23. Global Money Management The Tax Objective
Countries tax income earned outside their boundaries by firms based in their country
This may lead to double taxation whereby the firm is taxed by both the host-country government and the parent firm’s home government
Tax rates vary across countries
Tax rates are continually changing and harmonizing
24. Corporate Income Tax Rates 2006
25. Mitigation of Double Taxation Tax Credit
allows entity to reduce home taxes by the amount of taxes paid to foreign government
Tax Treaty
an agreement between countries specifying what items will be taxed by authorities of the country where income is earned
Deferral Principle
allows parent companies to not be taxed on foreign income until the dividend is received
Tax Haven
used to minimize tax liability
26. Moving Money Across Borders: Attaining Efficiencies and Reducing Taxes
27. Unbundling Mix of techniques used to transfer liquid funds from a foreign subsidiary to the parent company without concerning the host-country
Dividend Remittances
Royalty Payments and Fees
Transfer Prices
Fronting Loans
Selecting a particular policy is limited when a foreign subsidiary is part-owned by a local joint venture partner or local stockholders
28. Dividend Remittances Most common method of transfer
Dividends remittances vary due to:
tax regulations
foreign exchange risk
age of subsidiary
extent of local equity participation
29. Royalty Payments The remuneration paid to owners of technology, patents
or trade names for their use by the firm
Common for parent to charge a subsidiary for technology, patents or trade names transferred to it
May be levied as a fixed amount per unit sold or percentage of revenue earned
Often tax-deductible locally not like dividends
30. Fees Fees are compensation for professional services or expertise supplied to subsidiary by parent firm
Management fees or ‘technical assistance’ fees
Fixed charges for services provided
Often tax-deductible locally not like dividends
31. Transfer Prices Price at which goods and/or services
are transferred within a firm’s entities
Used to position funds within a company
Move funds out of country by setting high transfer fees or into a country by setting low transfer fees
Movement can be between subsidiaries or between the parent and its subsidiaries
UN estimates that 40% of international trade is between the subsidiaries of companies
32. Benefits of Manipulating Transfer Prices Reduce tax liabilities by using transfer fees to shift earnings from a high-tax country to a low-tax country
Move funds out of a country where a significant currency devaluation is expected to help reduce foreign exchange risk
Move funds from a subsidiary to the parent firm (or tax haven) when dividends are restricted by host country
Reduce import duties (ad valorem) by reducing transfer prices and the value of the goods
33. Problems with Transfer Pricing Governments don’t like losing their tax revenue
Inconsistent with treating subsidiaries as profit centers
Impacts management incentives and performance evaluations when it changes a subsidiary’s profits
Managers can manipulate transfer prices to distort subsidiary’s performance to mask inefficiencies
The ethics of transfer pricing are dubious at best
34. “Arm’s-Length” Price The price that would prevail between two unrelated firms in a market setting
35. Fronting Loans Loan between a parent and subsidiary is channeled through a financial intermediary (bank)
Allows circumvention of host-country restrictions on remittance of funds from subsidiary to parent company
Provides certain tax advantages by shifting tax liability to a country with a lower tax rate
36. Tax Aspects of a Fronting Loan Interest Payments Net of Income Taxes
Foreign subsidiary pays $90,000 interest to London bank and deducts the interest payments from its taxable income resulting in $45,000 after-tax cost
London bank receives $90,000 and retains $10,000 for services rendered and pays $80,000 interest on deposit to Bermuda subsidiary
Bermuda subsidiary receives $80,000 interest on deposit tax free
Because the foreign subsidiary’s after-tax cost of borrowing is $45,000, the parent company moved an additional $35,000 out of the country
37. Techniques for Global Money Management Two major techniques to most efficiently manage their global cash resources:
Centralized Depositories
Multilateral Netting
38. Centralized Depositories Firms need cash reserves to service accounts and insure against unanticipated negative cash flows
Should each foreign subsidiary hold its own cash balance?
Or should each subsidiary’s cash balances be held at a central depository?
39. Centralized Depositories Firms Prefer to Hold Cash at Central Depository
By pooling reserves, firms can deposit larger cash amounts and earn higher interest rates
If central depository is located in a major financial center, the firm can get information on good short-term investment opportunities
Can reduce the total size of the cash pool in highly liquid accounts, which enables the firm to invest larger amount of cash reserves in longer-term, less liquid instruments that earn a higher interest rate
40. Centralized Depositories Limitations
Government restrictions on cross-border cash flows
Transaction costs of moving funds in and out of different currencies
Facilitators
Globalization of capital markets
Removal of restrictions on cross-border cash flows
41. Multilateral Netting Allows a firm to reduce the transaction costs:
foreign exchange commissions
bank transfer fees
Bilateral Netting
settlement where the amount the Subsidiary A owes to Subsidiary B can be canceled by the debt of that Subsidiary B owes Subsidiary A
Multilateral Netting
extending the bilateral concept to multiple subsidiaries within an international business
42. Cash Flows before Multilateral Netting
$43 M needs to flow between subsidiaries
$430,000 foreign exchange costs (1% fee)
43. Cash Flows after Multilateral Netting
$5 M needs to flow between subsidiaries
$50,000 foreign exchange costs (1% fee)
Savings of $380,000