Exchange Rate Risk Management : Evidence from East Asia

The recent East Asian financial crisis provides a natural experiment for investigating foreign exchange risk management by nonfinancial corporations. During this period, the financial crisis exposed local firms to large depreciations in exchange rates and reduced access to foreign capital. The authors explore the exchange rate hedging practices of firms that hedged exposure to foreign debt in eight East Asian countries between 1996 and 1998. They identify and characterize East Asian companies that used foreign currency derivatives, documenting differences in size, financial characteristics, and exposure to domestic and foreign debt. They investigate the factors improtant in the use of foreign currency derivatives. Unlike studies of US firms, they find limited support for existing theories of optimal hedging. Instead, they find that firms use foreign earnings as a substitute for hedging with derivatives. And they find evidence that firms engage in "selective" hedging. They investigate the relative performance of hedgers during and after the crisis. They find no evidence that East Asian firms eliminated their foreign exchange exposure by using derivatives. Firms that used derivatives before the crisis performed just as poorly as nonhedgers during the crisis. After the crisis, firms that hedged performed somewhat better than nonhedgers, but this result appears to be explained by a larger post-crisis currency exposure for hedgers (an exchange rate risk premium), which had limited access to derivatives during this period.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Allayannis, George, Brown, Gregory W., Klapper, Leora
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2001-05
Subjects:BALANCE SHEET, BANK OF THAILAND, BONDS, BORROWING, CAPITAL EXPENDITURES, CAPITAL MARKETS, CENTRAL BANKS, COAL, CONVERTIBLE DEBENTURES, CORPORATE DEBT, CORPORATE FINANCE, CORPORATE MANAGERS, CREDIT RISK, CREDITOR, CURRENCY RISK, CURRENT RATIO, DEBT, DEBT CAPACITY, DEBT ISSUANCE, DEBT LEVEL, DEBT MARKETS, DEBT TO EQUITY RATIO, DEVALUATION, ECONOMICS, EMPIRICAL RESEARCH, EQUILIBRIUM, EQUITY MARKETS, EXCHANGE RATE, EXCHANGE RATES, FINANCIAL CRISIS, FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS, FINANCIAL LEVERAGE, FINANCIAL MARKETS, FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE, FINANCIAL RISK, FISCAL YEAR, FOREIGN BORROWING, FOREIGN DEBT, FOREIGN EXCHANGE, FOREIGN EXCHANGE EXPOSURE, FOREIGN EXCHANGE MARKETS, FOREIGN EXCHANGE RISK MANAGEMENT, GDP, GDP PER CAPITA, GROSS MARGIN, GROWTH POTENTIAL, ILLIQUIDITY, IMPORTS, INCOME, INTEREST COSTS, INTEREST COVERAGE RATIO, INTEREST RATE, INTEREST RATES, MACROECONOMIC CONDITIONS, MARKET LIQUIDITY, MARKET VALUE, MIDDLE INCOME COUNTRIES, OFFERINGS, PROFIT MARGIN, PROFITABILITY, QUICK RATIO, RISK FACTORS, RISK MANAGEMENT, STOCK MARKETS, TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE, TRANSACTION COSTS,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/05/1121294/exchange-rate-risk-management-evidence-east-asia
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/19655
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