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International Business 8e
By Charles W.L. Hill
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Chapter 20
Financial Management in the International
Business
Copyright © 2011 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin
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20-3
What Is Financial Management?
Financial management involves1. Investment decisions –what to finance2. Financing decisions –how to finance those decisions3. Money management decisions –how to manage the firm’s
financial resources most efficiently Good financial management can create a competitive
advantage reduces the costs of creating value and adds value by improving
customer service Decisions are more complex in international business
different currencies, tax regimes, regulations on capital flows, economic and political risk, etc.
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20-4
How Do Managers Make Investment Decisions?
Financial managers must quantify the benefits, costs, and risks associated with an investment in a foreign country
To do this, managers use capital budgeting involves estimating the cash flows associated with the
project over time, and then discounting them to determine their net present value
If the net present value of the discounted cash flows is greater than zero, the firm should go ahead with the project
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Why Is Capital Budgeting More Difficult For International Firms?
Capital budgeting is more complicated in international businessbecause a distinction must be made between
cash flows to the project and cash flows to the parent company
because of political and economic riskbecause the connection between cash flows to
the parent and the source of financing must be recognized
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20-6
What Is The Difference Between Project And Parent Cash Flows?
Cash flows to the project and cash flows to the parent company can be quite different
Parent companies are interested in the cash flows they will receive, not the cash flows the project generatesreceived cash flows are the basis for dividends, other
investments, repayment of debt, and so on
Cash flows to the parent may be lower because of host country limits on the repatriation of profits, host country local reinvestment requirements, etc.
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20-7
How Does Political Risk Influence Investment Decisions?
Political risk - the likelihood that political forces will cause drastic changes in a country’s business environment that hurt the profit and other goals of a businesshigher in countries with social unrest or disorder, or
where the nature of the society increases the chance for social unrest
Political change can result in the expropriation of a firm’s assets, or complete economic collapse that renders a firm’s assets worthless
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20-8
How Does Economic Risk Influence Investment Decisions?
Economic risk - the likelihood that economic mismanagement will cause drastic changes in a country’s business environment that hurt the profit and other goals of a business
The biggest economic risk is inflationreflected in falling currency values and lower
project cash flows
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20-9
How Can Firms Adjust For Political And Economic Risk?
Firms analyzing foreign investment opportunities can adjust for risk
1. By raising the discount rate in countries where political and economic risk is high
2. By lowering future cash flow estimates to account for adverse political or economic changes that could occur in the future
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20-10
How Do Firms Make Financing Decisions?
Firms must consider two factors 1. How the foreign investment will be financed
the cost of capital is usually lowest in the global capital market but, some governments require local debt or equity financing firms that anticipate a depreciation of the local currency, may
prefer local debt financing
2. How the financial structure (debt vs. equity) of the foreign affiliate should be configured
need to decide whether to adopt local capital structure norms or maintain the structure used in the home country
Most experts suggest that firms adopt the structure that minimizes the cost of capital, whatever that may be
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20-11
What Is Global Money Management?
Money management decisions attempt to manage global cash resources efficiently
Firms need to 1. Minimize cash balances - need cash balances
on hand for notes payable and unexpected demands
cash reserves are usually invested in money market accounts that offer low rates of interest
when firms invest in money market accounts they have unlimited liquidity, but low interest rates
when they invest in long-term instruments they have higher interest rates, but low liquidity
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20-12
What Is Global Money Management?
2. Reduce transaction costs - the cost of exchange every time a firm changes cash from one currency to
another, they face transaction costs
Most banks also charge a transfer fee for moving cash from one location to another
Multilateral netting can reduce the number of transactions between subsidiaries and the number of transaction costs
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How Can Firms Limit Their Tax Liability?
Every country has its own tax policies most countries feel they have the right to tax
the foreign-earned income of companies based in the country
Double taxation occurs when the income of a foreign subsidiary is taxed by the host-country government and by the home-country government
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20-14
How Can Firms Limit Their Tax Liability?
Taxes can be minimized through1. Tax credits - allow the firm to reduce the taxes paid to
the home government by the amount of taxes paid to the foreign government
2. Tax treaties - agreement specifying what items of income will be taxed by the authorities of the country where the income is earned
3. Deferral principle - specifies that parent companies are not taxed on foreign source income until they actually receive a dividend
4. Tax havens - countries with a very low, or no, income tax – firms can avoid income taxes by establishing a wholly-owned, non-operating subsidiary in the country
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20-15
How Do Corporate Tax Rates Compare?
Corporate Income Tax Rates, 2006
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20-16
How Do Firms Move Money Across Borders?
Firms can transfer liquid funds across border via1. Dividend remittances
2. Royalty payments and fees
3. Transfer prices
4. Fronting loans
Firms that use more than one of these techniques are unbundling
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20-17
What Are Dividend Remittances?
Paying dividends is the most common method of transferring funds from subsidiaries to the parent
The relative attractiveness of paying dividends varies according totax regulations – high tax rates make this less attractiveforeign exchange risk – dividends might speed up in
risky countriesthe age of the subsidiary – older subsidiaries remit a
higher proportion of their earning in dividendsthe extent of local equity participation – local owners’
demands for dividends come into play
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20-18
What Are Royalty Payments And Fees?
Royalties - the remuneration paid to the owners of technology, patents, or trade names for the use of that technology or the right to manufacture and/or sell products under those patents or trade names can be levied as a fixed amount per unit or as a percentage of gross
revenues most parent companies charge subsidiaries royalties for the
technology, patents or trade names transferred to them A fee is compensation for professional services or
expertise supplied to a foreign subsidiary by the parent company or another subsidiary royalties and fees are often tax-deductible locally
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20-19
What Are Transfer Prices? Transfer prices - the price at which goods and
services are transferred between entities within the firm
Transfer prices can be manipulated to1. Reduce tax liabilities by shifting earnings from high-tax
countries to low-tax countries2. Move funds out of a country where a significant
currency devaluation is expected3. Move funds from a subsidiary to the parent when
dividends are restricted by the host government4. Reduce import duties when ad valorem tariffs are in
effect
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20-20
What Makes Transfer Prices Unattractive?
But, using transfer pricing can be problematic because1. Governments think they are being cheated out
of legitimate income
2. Governments believe firms are breaking the spirit of the law when transfer prices are used to circumvent restrictions of capital flows
3. It complicates management incentives and performance evaluation
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What Are Fronting Loans?
Fronting loans are loans between a parent and its subsidiary channeled through a financial intermediary, usually a large international bank
Firms use fronting loansto circumvent host-country restrictions on the
remittance of funds from a foreign subsidiary to the parent company
to gain tax advantages
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20-22
What Are Fronting Loans?An Example of the Tax Aspects of a Fronting Loan
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20-23
How Do Firms Manage Global Cash Resources?
Firms manage their global cash resources using1. Centralized depositories Holding cash balances at a centralized depository is
attractive because by pooling cash reserves centrally, firms can deposit larger
amounts, and therefore earn higher rates of interest when centralized depositories are located in major financial
centers, the firm has access to a greater variety of investment opportunities than a subsidiary would have
by pooling cash reserves, firms can reduce the total size of the readily accessible cash pool, and invest larger amounts in longer-term, less liquid accounts that have higher interest rates
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How Do Firms Manage Global Cash Resources?
But, centralized depositories can be unattractive because of
government restrictions on cross-border capital flows the transaction costs involved in moving money in
and out
The use of centralized depositories is expected to increase because of the globalization of capital markets and the removal of barriers to the free flow of capital across borders
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20-25
How Do Firms Manage Global Cash Resources?
2. Multilateral netting - can reduce the transaction costs associated with many transactions between subsidiaries
an extension of bilateral netting if a French subsidiary owes a Mexican subsidiary $6 million,
and the Mexican subsidiary simultaneously owes the French subsidiary $4 million, a bilateral settlement will be made with a single payment of $2 million
Under multilateral netting, the concept is extended to multiple subsidiaries within an international business
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What Is Multilateral Netting?Cash Flows Before Multilateral Netting
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What Is Multilateral Netting?Calculation of Net Receipts (millions)
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20-28
What Is Multilateral Netting?Cash Flows After Multilateral Netting
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20-29
Review Question
Which of the following is not one of the
decision areas in financial management?
a) cash operations decisions
b) investment decisions
c) financing decisions
d) money management decisions
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20-30
Review Question
The fee for moving cash from one location to
another is called
a) the money management fee
b) the transaction cost
c) the transfer fee
d) the cost of capital
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20-31
Review Question
Compared to the other countries, corporate
income tax rates in ________ are relatively low.
a) Canada
b) Ireland
c) Germany
d) Japan
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20-32
Review Question
A __________ specifies that parent companiesare not taxed on foreign source income untilthey actually receive a dividend.
a) tax creditb) deferral principlec) tax havend) tax treaty
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20-33
Review Question
Firms can transfer liquid funds across borders
using all of the following techniques except
a) dividend remittances
b) royalty payments and fees
c) transfer prices
d) backing loans
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20-34
Review Question
The most common method of transferringfunds from subsidiaries to the parent isthrough
a) dividend remittancesb) royalty payments and feesc) transfer pricesd) backing loans