Ch. 18 International Aspects of Financial Management
Forward trade
Agreement to exchange currency at some time in the future.
Swaps
Agreements to exchange two securities or currencies.
Spot Trade
An agreement to trade currencies based on the exchange rates today for settlement within two business days.
Gilts
British and Irish government securities.
Foreign Bonds
International bonds issued in a single country, usually denominated in that country's currency.
Eurobonds
International bonds issues multiple countries but denominated in a single currency usually the issuers currency.
Eurocurrency
Money deposited in a financial center outside of the country whose currency is involved.
Political Risk
Risk related to changes in value that arise because of political actions.
American Depositary Receipt (ADR)
Security issued in the U.S representing shares of a foreign stock, allowing that stock to be traded in the U.S.
Foreign Exchange Market
The Market in which one countries currency is traded for another.
Forward exchange rate
The agreed upon exchange rate to be used in a forward trade.
Interest rate parity (IRP)
The condition stating that the interest rate differential between two countries is equal to the percentage difference between the forward exchange rate and the spot exchange rate.
Spot exchange rate
The exchange rate on spot trade.
Purchasing power parity (PPP)
The idea that the exchange rate adjusts to keep purchasing power constant among currencies.
Cross-rate
The implicit exchange rate between two currencies usually non U.S quoted in some third currency usually U.S dollar.
Exchange Rate
The price of one country's expressed in terms of another country's currency.
London Interbank Offer Rate (LIBOR)
The rate most international banks charge one another for overnight Eurodollar loans.
Exchange rate risk
The risk related to having international operations in a world where relative currency values vary.