*Translation risk - who to blame - how not to blame
*
The Q2 results of leading corporates have arrived by now with Translation
numbers all in red. who to blame - of course everybody has blamed the Rupee
depreciation. But the corporates too have to share the blame. Not because
they did not anticipate the pace & extent of move- Even the brilliant minds
make guesstimates only after 50% move is done !! . Very few learned from
2008.

Corporates are confused between chasing accounting goals and real risks.
The fear of an lost opportunity due to lock-in from a hedge is difficult to
sink-in . However the translation loss is oft treated as a notional with
complete confidence that the currency will take care in next quarter, so as
to write back.  Problem comes when Currency shifts its trading zone
altogether and refuses to budge . The translation now starts getting
converted into a Real Cash loss

The forward premiums in Q1 were definitely higher 5-6% p.a -- a hedging
cost. Most of those who did not cover, did so with anticipated Rupee value
at time of maturity of the Hedge with an argument that its a sunk cost.
Thus the known sunk cost was traded with an unknown translation risk which
eventually becomes an even higher sunk cost.

For almost all , the cost of rupee borrowing was 10%+ and the premise of
dollar borrowing is clear - i.e to reduce the wt avg. cost of debt . The
Fx. element however gets ignored. This happens because the business units
do not work in tandem. The fund raising unit achieves its target by
resorting to dollar borrowing and acheiving the target wt avg cost of
funds. The accounting unit aims for further cost reduction through currency
movement. Ideal would be an end-to-end fund raising cum cost saving
exercise on fully hedged basis.

There are very few occasions which the market presents , wherein one can
target translation as well as real risk. For e.g 5 year MIFOR in 2008 and
2011(5-6%) would render a fully hedged cost of $ funds to 8-9% INR (against
11-12% INR funds). One had the chance to hedge accounting as well as market
risk with a single swap. What comes in the way is greed to further optimise
by playing with the currency - hoping it would appreciate further from
initial conversion rate .

Indian firms have yet another year to spread fx. fluctuation impact by
recognising such differences over the period of the underlying
asset/liability. IFRS requires such differences to be immediately charged
to P&L A/c . As some radical opinions float in the market maybe this maybe
the decade of 50`s to 60`s for Rupee. But , nevertheless, there would be
occassions wherein one can latch on by having clarity of tackling market
risk rather than accounting risk and seizing those rare moments like in
2008 and 2011 where a single instrument tackles both issues.

*--Prateesh Sane (Certified treasury manager (CTM))*
*  **[email protected]* <[email protected]>* *
*  Author of this article is a full-time working Risk Manager. **Views
expressed are strictly his own*.
 * Do mail back for views / opinions / doubts / consulting / advisory / job
offers.*


-- 
Best Regards,
Jay Shah, FRM
*Expect the unexpected!!!
*

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