Chapter 10 Translation Exposure
Chapter 10 Translation Exposure
Chapter 10 Translation Exposure
Translation Exposure
c.
TRANSLATION
EXPOSURE
Translation exposure, also called accounting
exposure, arises because the financial statements of
foreign subsidiaries must be restated in the parent’s
reporting currency for the firm to prepare its consolidated
financial statements
Translation exposure is the potential for an increase or
decrease in the parent’s net worth and reported income
caused by a change in exchange rates since the last
transaction
Translation methods differ by country along two
dimensions
One is a difference in the way a foreign subsidiary is
characterized depending on its independence
The other is the definition of which currency is most
important for the subsidiary
SUBSIDIARY
CHARACTERIZATION
Most countries specify the translation method to be used by
a foreign subsidiary based upon its operations
A foreign subsidiary can be classified as
Integrated Foreign Entity – one which operates as an
extension of the parent company, with cash flows and line
items that are highly integrated with the parent
Self-sustaining Foreign Entity – one which operates in the
local economy independent of its parent
The foreign subsidiary should be valued in terms of the
currency that is the basis of its economic viability
FUNCTIONAL CURRENCY
A foreign affiliate’s functional currency is the currency of
the primary economic environment in which the subsidiary
operates
The geographic location of a subsidiary and its functional
currency can be different
Example: US subsidiary located in Singapore may find that its
functional currency could be
US dollars (integrated subsidiary)
Singapore dollars (self-sustaining subsidiary)
British pounds (self-sustaining subsidiary)
TRANSLATION METHODS
There are two basic methods for the translation of foreign
subsidiary financial statements
The current rate method
The temporal method
Regardless of which is used, either method must designate
The exchange rate at which individual balance sheet and income
statement items are remeasured
Where any imbalances are to be recorded
This can affect either the balance sheet or the income statement
CURRENT RATE METHOD
Under this method all financial statement items are
translated at the “current” exchange rate
Assets & liabilities – are translated at the rate of
exchange in effect on the balance sheet date
Income statement items – all items are translated at
either the actual exchange rate on the dates the various
revenues, expenses, gains and losses were incurred or
at a weighted average exchange rate for the period
Distributions – dividends paid are translated at the rate
in effect on the date of payment
Equity items – common stock and paid-in capital are
translated at historical rates; year end retained earnings
consist of year-beginning plus or minus any income or
loss on the year
CURRENT RATE METHOD
Any gain or loss from re-measurement is closed to an equity
reserve account entitled the cumulative translation
adjustment, rather than through the company’s
consolidated income statement
These cumulative gains and losses from remeasurement are
only recognized in current income under the current rate
method when the foreign subsidiary giving rise to that gain
or loss is liquidated
TEMPORAL METHOD
Under this method, specific assets and liabilities are
translated at exchange rates consistent with the timing of
the item’s creation
The temporal method assumes that a number of line items
such as inventories and net plant and equipment are
restated to reflect market value
If these items were not restated and carried at historical
costs, then the temporal method becomes the
monetary/non-monetary method
TEMPORAL METHOD
Line items included in this method are
Monetary assets (primarily cash, accounts receivable, and long-
term receivables) and all monetary liabilities are translated at
current exchange rates
Non-monetary assets (primarily inventory and plant and
equipment) are translated at historical exchange rates
Income statement items – are translated at the average
exchange rate for the period except for depreciation and cost of
goods sold which are associated with non-monetary items,
these items are translated at their historical rate
TEMPORAL METHOD
Line items included in this method are
Distributions – dividends paid are translated at the exchange
rate in effect the date of payment
Equity items – common stock and paid-in capital are translated
at historical rates; year end retained earnings consist of year-
beginning plus or minus any income or loss on the year plus or
minus any imbalance from translation
Under the temporal method, any gains or losses from
remeasurement are carried directly to current consolidated
income and not to equity reserves
US TRANSLATION
PROCEDURES
The US differentiates foreign subsidiaries on the basis of
functional currency, not subsidiary characterization
Under US GAAP, following are the procedures for foreign
subsidiary translation
MANAGERIAL
IMPLICATIONS
In the previous slides, the translation loss or gain is larger
under the current rate method because inventory and PP&E
as well as monetary assets are deemed exposed
The managerial implications are
If management expects a currency to depreciate, it could
minimize translation exposure by reducing net exposed assets
If management expects appreciation, it should increase net
exposed assets to benefit from the gain
COMPARING
TRANSLATION
EXPOSURE TO
OPERATING EXPOSURE
Translation gains or losses can be different from operating
gains or losses, not only in magnitude but in sign
A manager focusing only on translation losses might avoid
countries because of likelihood of such losses
The manager might fear losses tied to reported profits
Operating exposure, under these same circumstances shows
that Germany is more desirable location because of the
operating consequences
This illustrates the importance of focusing decisions on
operating consequences and not accounting based
consequences
MANAGING
TRANSLATION
EXPOSURE
Balance Sheet Hedge – this requires an equal amount of
exposed foreign currency assets and liabilities on a firm’s
consolidated balance sheet
A change in exchange rates will change the value of exposed
assets but offset that with an opposite change in liabilities
This is termed monetary balance
The cost of this method depends on relative borrowing costs in
the varying currencies