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Chapter 1

Multinational
Financial
Management:
Opportunities and
Challenges
Learning Objectives

Understand the complexity of risks


associated with financial globalization
Explore how global capital markets are
critical for the exchange of products,
services, and capital in the execution of
global business
Consider how the theory of comparative
advantage establishes the foundations for
the justification for international trade and
commerce

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Learning Objectives

Discover what is different about international


financial management, and which market
imperfections give rise to the multinational
enterprise
Examine how imperfections in global markets
translate into opportunities for multinational
enterprises
Consider how the globalization process moves a
business from a purely domestic focus in its
financial relationships and composition to one truly
global in scope

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The Multinational Enterprise
(MNE)
The OctoberDecember 2014 quarter was a challenging one with
unprecedented currency devaluations. Virtually every currency in the world
devalued versus the U.S. dollar, with the Russian Ruble leading the way.
While we continue to make steady progress on the strategic transformation of
the companywhich focuses P&G on about a dozen core categories and 70 to
80 brands, on leading brand growth, on accelerating meaningful product
innovation and increasing productivity savingsthe considerable business
portfolio, product innovation, and productivity progress was not enough to
overcome foreign exchange.
Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer A.G. Lafley, January 27, 2015

A multinational enterprise (MNE) has operating


branches, subsidiaries, or affiliates located in
foreign countries.
Todays MNEs are dependent on emerging markets.

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Financial Globalization and Risk

The global financial market place is a combination of complex


risks:
The international monetary system is an eclectic mix of floating
and managed fixed exchange rates. China is more and more a
dominant player.
Monetary and fiscal policies are complicated by large fiscal
deficits.
Large and continuing balance of payments imbalances will shift
the exchange rate landscape.
The dominant form of business may has shifted from the publicly-
traded firm to the privately owned model.
Global capital markets are shrinking and changing.
Large inflows and outflows of capital travel through industrial and
emerging markets complicating financial management.

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The Global Financial Marketplace

Assets, institutions, and linkages comprise one


method to map global capital markets (see Exhibit
1.1).

Assets are debt securities issued by governments


(e.g., U.S. Treasury Bonds). These form the
baseline for other forms of financing.
Institutions are the central banks, commercial,
and investment banks. Their health keeps the
global financial system stable.
Linkages are the interbank networks using
currency. Without ready exchange of currencies the
market is hard-pressed to operate efficiently.

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Exhibit 1.1 Global Capital Markets

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The Market for Currencies

Most currencies are quoted against the


dollar as in so many units per dollar
A few are quoted as dollars per unit due to
custom e.g., $/ and $/.
There are also several symbols that can be
used to write the quotations, but this is the
authors stated preference.
Exhibit 1.2 provides selected currency
exchange rate quotes

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Exhibit 1.2 Selected Global Currency
Exchange Rates

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Exhibit 1.2 Selected Global Currency
Exchange Rates (cont.)

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Eurocurrencies and LIBOR

Eurocurrencies (a major linkage in the


global and capital markets)
These are domestic currencies of one country on
deposit in a second country
The Eurocurrency markets serve two valuable
purposes:
Eurocurrency deposits are an efficient and convenient
money market device for holding excess corporate
liquidity
The Eurocurrency market is a major source of short-
term bank loans to finance corporate working capital
needs (including export and import financing)

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Eurocurrencies and LIBOR

Eurocurrency Interest Rates: LIBOR


In the Eurocurrency market, the reference rate
of interest is the London Interbank Offered Rate
(LIBOR)
This rate is the most widely accepted rate of
interest used in standardized quotations, loan
agreements, and financial derivatives
transactions

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The Theory
of Comparative Advantage
The theory of comparative advantage provides a basis
for explaining and justifying international trade in a
model world assumed to enjoy:
free trade;
perfect competition;
no uncertainty;
costless information; and
no government interference.

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The Theory
of Comparative Advantage
The theory contains the following features:
Exporters in Country A sell goods or services to unrelated
importers in Country B
Firms in Country A specialize in making products that can
be produced relatively efficiently, given Country As
endowment of factors of production, that is, land, labor,
capital, and technology
Firms in Country B do likewise, given the factors of
production found in Country B
In this way the total combined output of A and B is
maximized

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The Theory
of Comparative Advantage
Because the factors of production cannot be moved freely
from Country A to Country B, the benefits of specialization
are realized through international trade
The way the benefits of the extra production are shared
depends on the terms of trade, the ratio at which
quantities of the physical goods are traded
Each countrys share is determined by supply and demand
in perfectly competitive markets in the two countries
Neither Country A nor Country B is worse off than before
trade, and typically both are better off, albeit perhaps
unequally

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The Theory
of Comparative Advantage
Although international trade might have
approached the comparative advantage model
during the nineteenth century, it certainly does not
today, for the following reasons:
Countries do not appear to specialize only in those
products that could be most efficiently produced by that
countrys particular factors of production (as a result of
government interference and ulterior motivations)
At least two factors of production capital and technology
now flow directly and easily between countries

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The Theory
of Comparative Advantage
Modern factors of production are more numerous than in
this simple model
Although the terms of trade are ultimately determined by
supply and demand, the process by which the terms are
set is different from that visualized in traditional trade
theory
Comparative advantage shifts over time, as less developed
countries become developed and realize their latent
opportunities
The classical model of comparative advantage did not
really address certain other issues, such as the effect of
uncertainty and information costs, the role of differentiated
products in imperfectly competitive markets, and
economies of scale

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The Theory
of Comparative Advantage
Comparative advantage is however still a relevant
theory to explain why particular countries are most
suitable for exports of goods and services that
support the global supply chain of both MNEs and
domestic firms.
The comparative advantage of the 21st century,
however, is one based more on services, and their
cross-border facilitation by telecommunications and
the Internet.
The source of a nations comparative advantage is
still created from the mixture of its own labor skills,
access to capital, and technology.

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The Theory
of Comparative Advantage
Many locations for supply chain outsourcing exist
today.
It takes a relative advantage in costs, not just an
absolute advantage, to create comparative
advantage.
Clearly, the extent of global outsourcing is reaching
out to every corner of the globe.

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What is Different About International
Financial Management?

Exhibit 1.3 summarizes the differences.


Culture and history differ among countries
Corporate governance
Greater levels of foreign exchange and political
risks
Financial theory and applications are modified in
the global versus domestic marketplace
Specialized and complicated financial
instruments become tools of the trade

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Exhibit 1.3 What Is Different About
International Financial Management?

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Market Imperfections: A Rationale for
the Existence of the Multinational Firm

MNEs strive to take advantage of imperfections in


national markets for products, factors of
production, and financial assets.
Imperfections in the market for products translate
into market opportunities for MNEs.
Large international firms are better able to exploit
such competitive factors as economies of scale,
managerial and technological expertise, product
differentiation, and financial strength than their
local competitors.

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Market Imperfections: A Rationale for
the Existence of the Multinational Firm

Strategic motives drive the decision to invest


abroad and become a MNE and can be summarized
under the following categories:
Market seekers
Raw material seekers
Production efficiency seekers
Knowledge seekers
Political safety seekers

These categories are not mutually exclusive.

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The Globalization Process

Stage I: early domestic phase growing into


the international trade phase (Exhibit 1.4)
Stage II: A successful firm will continue to
grow from simple international trade to the
multinational phase characterized by
production and investment both at home
and abroad (Exhibit 1.5)
Growth may be limited by the twin agency
problems of corporate insiders and the
rulers of sovereign states (Exhibit 1.6)

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Exhibit 1.4 Ganado Corp: Initiation of
the Globalization Process

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Exhibit 1.5 Ganados Foreign Direct
Investment Sequence

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Exhibit 1.6 The Limits of Financial
Globalization

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