Firmer U.S. dollar boosts corporate interest in currency
hedging
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[July 19, 2018]
By Saqib Iqbal Ahmed, Jessica DiNapoli and Caroline
Valetkevitch
NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. multinational
companies are starting to reevaluate their currency hedging strategies
after a surge in the dollar in recent months, as the impact of the
stronger greenback starts to show up in second-quarter corporate
earnings.
A stronger dollar claimed Netflix Inc <NFLX.O> as its first victim of
the earnings season on Monday. The company, which does not hedge its
revenue with derivatives, said foreign exchange rates pushed its
expectations on the 2018 operating margin to near the lower end of its
target range.
"This will be another wake-up call," said Wolfgang Koester, chief
executive at currency risk consulting firm FiREapps, in Scottsdale,
Arizona. "There are still a lot of companies that don't manage this well
enough."
The dollar gained more than 5 percent against major trading partners'
currencies <.DXY> in the second quarter, supported by rising trade war
tensions and a hawkish Federal Reserve.
The dollar index, which at the start of the second quarter had been down
about 11 percent year-over-year, rose to finish the quarter nearly flat
on a year-over-year basis.
The dollar's rise has emerged as a surprise risk at the start of what is
otherwise expected to be a robust U.S. corporate earnings season.
Foreign currency earnings of U.S. multinational companies are worth less
in dollars when the currency is stronger.
Banks said their inquiries from clients had gone up recently.
"Our volume of hedging activities increased from clients from April or
May until now,” said Kuniyuki Hirai, head of foreign exchange trading
for MUFG in New York.
The dollar's recent strength is a sharp departure from its weakening
trend in 2017, when it delivered a boost to large U.S. companies and may
have made managing currency risks less of a priority.
Some analysts expect a rise in trade protectionism to boost the
greenback in the near term, which could mean more companies are likely
to cite the stronger dollar for future earnings weakness.
“We get more questions about hedging when currency moves,” said Roberto
Battistuzzi, director of foreign exchange sales at Credit Suisse. “If
anything, it allows companies to take the opportunity to see how the
programs are performing.”
Bryan Morales, a director in Citizens Bank's global markets group, said
there had been some pickup in hedging demand recently, with the Federal
Reserve hiking rates. Interest rate differences between countries drive
hedging costs, and as the Fed raises interest rates it can become more
attractive to hedge.
The Fed has raised rates twice already this year and is expected to
raise rates one or two more times by year end.
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The image of United States President George Washington is seen on an
engraving plate for a US one dollar bill at the Bureau of Engraving
and Printing in Washington November 14, 2014. REUTERS/Gary
CameronREUTERS/ /File Photo
"It's provided more opportunity for clients hesitant about hedging to take
advantage of a premium," Morales said.
To view a graphic on The U.S. dollar's April-June quarter, click: https://reut.rs/2JyV0xg
MANAGING RISK
Netflix is an example of currency risks faced by companies that do a lot of
their business in international markets, even as the vast majority of their
costs remain dollar-denominated.
The company, which does not plan to change its stance on currency hedging, will
try to move more of its costs offshore, to help create a natural hedge, a
Netflix spokesman said.
That approach is favored by an increasing number of companies.
Bob Doll, senior portfolio manager and chief equity strategist at Nuveen Asset
Management, in Princeton, New Jersey, said natural hedging is being relied on
"more and more" by companies, "particularly as they become more global and have
so many currency relationships."
But there are limits to the strategy. "It's rare in these industries that you
can have a full natural hedge position," said Amo Sahota, director at Klarity FX
in San Francisco. "We expect to see the market start to return to more
traditional long-term hedging programs."
Oracle Corp <ORCL.N> is among other companies that have mentioned the dollar as
a headwind while Carnival Corp <CCL.N> and Akamai Technologies <AKAM.O> have
also talked in recent months about the adverse impact from the dollar.
Bank of America Merrill Lynch estimates that a sustained 10 percent appreciation
in the dollar against the euro results in a reduction in S&P 500 earnings per
share of 3 to 4 percent.
"Right now there are a number of companies out there which are still reporting
the positive impact of currency valuations from the 2017 dollar weakness,"
Sahota said. "But that's quickly going to turn around as they start to get the
impact from the first half of 2018."
For the second quarter, year-over-year profit growth for all S&P 500 companies
is estimated at 21.4 percent, according to Thomson Reuters data. That follows
earnings growth of 26.6 percent in the first quarter.
(Reporting by Saqib Iqbal Ahmed, Caroline Valetkevitch and Jessica DiNapoli;
Editing by Leslie Adler)
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