Forex Hedge Accounting Treatment
OANDA’s FXConsulting
for Corporations
17
Other Issues
The following are some additional points to consider before deciding on the best type of forex product
for your company.
Forex Options
Often, financial institutions will try to sell a company on using currency options or more complex forex
products to limit downside risk and offer the lure of participating in positive foreign exchange rate
movements. This flexibility has a cost attached to it, either in the form of an upfront option cost or
unfavourable foreign currency rates (spreads).
Here’s how options can work: a company will purchase an option with a cash outlay to buy or sell a
specified amount of one currency at a specific rate for a certain amount of time.
If the rate moves significantly in the company's favor, the option is allowed to lapse (cost
expensed) and the company can use the current forex market rate to complete the transaction,
thereby taking advantage of the positive forex price movement (less the cost of the option).
If the forex market moves against the company, then it can use the option price to effectively
convert its asset or liability less the cost of the option. The cost of the option will include the
time value of the interest differential (or interest carry cost) on the currency pair, a cost
associated with the expected volatility of the currency pair, and a likely profit for the option
provider.
The offer to share in the upside potential comes at a cost. Typically, banks charge an amount above
their calculated option cost (mark-up) to make up for the fact that option pricing relies on historical
forex volatility, which is never a precise method of predicting future market prices. Further, since banks
must manage the risk associated with option pricing, they maximize profit on each transaction.
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