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Glossary

Navigate the complex world of currency management with our comprehensive dictionary of financial terms and definitions.

foreign currency monetary items
foreign currency monetary items

Foreign currency monetary items are FX-denominated assets and liabilities representing a claim to receive, or an obligation to pay, a fixed amount of foreign currency units. Examples of foreign currency monetary items are FX-denominated cash positions, accounts payable and receivable, and long-term debt. By contrast, non-monetary foreign currency items include inventory, fixed assets and long-term investments. The distinction between foreign currency monetary and non-monetary items is relevant in terms of the different techniques used in FX translation methods. With the monetary/nonmonetary method, monetary items such as cash, accounts receivable and payable, are translated at the current exchange rate, while nonmonetary items (inventory, fixed assets) are translated at the historical exchange rate.

foreign currency options
foreign currency options

A foreign currency option is a financial derivative instrument that gives the buyer the right —but not the obligation — to buy (in a ‘call’ option), or to sell (in a ‘put’ option) the contracted currency at a set price or exchange rate (known as the ‘strike price’), on a predetermined expiration date. The seller of the option must fulfill the contract if the buyer so desires. Because the foreign currency option has value, the buyer must pay the seller a premium in exchange for the right to exercise the option. An ‘American’ call or put option can be exercised at any time up to the expiration date; a ‘European’ option can be exercised only at maturity. When hedging regular foreign currency inflows and outflows, forward contracts are more widely used than foreign currency options. However, foreign currency options can be an efficient tool when contingent business events are hedged.

foreign currency remeasurement
foreign currency remeasurement

Foreign currency remeasurement is a procedure that restates the value of payables, receivables, and cash balances posted in a foreign currency to the company currency at period end. The key day for foreign currency remeasurement is the last day of the period or fiscal year. Items are valued using the exchange rate valid on the key date and compared to the amounts that were originally posted.

foreign currency revaluation
foreign currency revaluation

Foreign currency revaluation is a treasury concept defining the method by which international businesses translate the value of all their foreign currency-denominated open accounts – i.e. payable and receivable transactions – into the company's reporting currency.The challenges of Foreign currency revaluationAccounting regulations require international businesses to keep an updated record of the value of all open transactions in their reporting currency. In the case of payables and receivables due to be settled in foreign currency, these are subject to transaction risk, which refers to the adverse impact that movements in the exchange rate could have on the companies' account books.The company runs a foreign currency revaluation process to solve this issue. At the end of each accounting period, the value of all open transactions is translated into the reporting currency using the current spot exchange rate. These revaluations generate differences in the value of the company's monetary assets and liabilities, which get recorded under "unrealised gains and losses".When the transaction is settled, the differences in value between the firm sale or purchase commitment and the payment date are recorded as realised FX gains/losses on the balance sheet.

foreign currency risk
foreign currency risk

Foreign currency risk or foreign exchange rate risk, also known as exchange rate risk, is the possibility that currency fluctuations can affect a firm’s expected future operating cash flows, i.e., its future revenues and costs. Exchange rate risk affects all companies with international operations. For companies desiring to take advantage of the growth opportunities from buying and selling in multiple currencies, effectively managing currency risk is an essential task. Foreign currency risk can be decomposed into: Pricing risk, between the moment a transaction is priced and settled Transaction risk, between the moment a transaction is agreed and settled Accounting risk, between the moment the invoice is created and settled The most effective tool to manage foreign currency risk is to deploy FX hedging programs —and combinations of hedging programs — that allow management to achieve the firm’s goals in a systematic way, meaning: (a) targets must be consistently accomplished over time; (b) the goals of the program must be clearly communicated across the enterprise in as much detail as possible.

foreign currency risk management
foreign currency risk management

Foreign currency risk management is the process that allows firms to protect themselves from currency risk. This allows them to take control of their own competitiveness by capturing the growth opportunities resulting from buying and selling in multiple currencies. With FX risk under control, managers can focus on growing the business. Foreign currency risk management relies on a variety of hedging programs and combination of programs. The details of each program vary according to the pricing dynamics, the weight of FX in the business, the location of competitors, and the situation in terms of forward points. Implemented by means of Currency Management Automation solutions, foreign currency risk management programs also take into account the company’s sources of information, IT systems, degree of cash flow visibility, and key decision makers (their risk tolerance, their familiarity with different risk management styles, etc.).

foreign currency transaction
foreign currency transaction

A foreing currency transaction is a sales or purchase transaction denominated in a currency other than the company’s functional currency. A foreign currency transaction involving foreign currencies commonly goes through several stages. (a) Forecast. A forecast is an anticipated transaction that is not yet legally committed. In IFRS terms, a transaction is ‘expected to occur’ if its estimated probability ranges between 20% and 75%. (b) SO/PO. Also known as a ‘firm commitment’, a SO/PO (sales order/purchase order) is a legally binding agreement that establishes the exchange of a specified quantity of resources at a specified price on a specified future date or dates. (c) AR/AP. A foreign currency denominated trade receivable or payable is a legally enforceable claim that certifies the sale/purchase to be settled at a later date. (d) Settlement. The transaction is settled when payment in cash, in a foreign currency, finally takes place.

foreign currency translation
foreign currency translation

Foreign currency translation is the restatement, in the currency in which a company presents its financial statements, of all assets, liabilities, revenues, expenses, gains and losses that are denominated in foreign currencies. The process of foreign currency translation results in accounting FX gains and losses. There are three main foreign currency translation methods available. With the current/noncurrent method, all the foreign exchange denominated current assets and liabilities are translated at the current exchange rate, while non-current assets and liabilities are translated at the historical exchange rate. With the monetary/nonmonetary method, monetary items such as cash, accounts receivable and payable, are translated at the current exchange rate, while nonmonetary items (inventory, fixed assets) are translated at the historical exchange rate. Finally, with the current rate method, all balance sheet and income statement items are translated at the current exchange rate. No matter what foreign currency translation is used, the resulting FX gains and losses are paper only, and rarely affect cash flows.

foreign currency valuation
foreign currency valuation

Foreign currency valuation is a term used by vendors of Enterprise Currency Management vendors to record the impact of foreign currency changes into its FX-denominated assets, liabilities, revenues, expenses, gains and losses Once foreign currency valuation is complete, foreign currency translation is executed to prepare financial reports in the firm’s presentation currency.

foreign exchange
foreign exchange

Foreign exchange or ‘FX’ is a term used to describe the exchange or trading of one currency to another. The foreign exchange market has no central marketplace: spot and forward market transactions take place in an ‘Over-the-Counter’ market made up of dealers and large commercial and investment banks. Turnover in global foreign exchange (FX) markets reached $6.6 trillion per day in April 2019, according to data from the Bank for International Settlements (BIS). It is by far the largest financial market in the world. OTC markets are larger and more diversified than ever, owing in part to the rise of electronic and automated trading While trading continues to be dominated by the major currencies, in particular the US dollar and the euro, in FX markets the trading of emerging market currencies is growing faster than that of major currencies. The rise in electronic and automated trading is one of the key features of today’s foreign exchange markets.

foreign exchange accounting
foreign exchange accounting

Foreign exchange accounting or FX accounting consists in reporting, in a company’s presentation currency, all assets, liabilities, revenues, expenses, gains and losses that are denominated in foreign currencies. The rules that govern foreign exchange accounting are devised by accounting associations such as the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB). It is important not to confuse foreign exchange accounting, applicable to all companies that transact in foreign currencies with ‘Hedge Accounting’, an optional technique that modifies the normal accounting basis for recognising gains and losses on associated hedging instruments and hedged items, so that both are recognised in P&L (or OCI) in the same accounting period.

foreign exchange broker
foreign exchange broker

A foreign exchange broker, also known as an FX broker or a forex broker, buys and sells currencies on behalf of clients while charging a commission for the service. Foreign exchange brokers are ‘middlemen’ who match the currency buy and sell orders from their clients to other clients orders. A foreign exchange broker will guarantee that trades will be actually settled, avoiding the need for buyers and sellers to check each other’s creditworthiness. Thanks to a wide range of connections with liquidity providers (mostly banks) and dealers, a foreign exchange broker will usually get preferential exchange rates that can be passed on to clients at low spreads.

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