Deconstructing Myths About Foreign Exchange Options
by Ian H. Giddy

Although FX options are more widely used today than ever before, few
multinationals act as if they truly understand when and why these instruments
can add to shareholder value. To the contrary, much of the time corporates
seem to use FX options to paper over accounting problems, or to disguise the
true cost of speculative positioning, or sometimes to solve internal control
problems.
The standard cliché about currency options affirms without elaboration their
power to provide a company with upside potential while limiting the downside
risk. Options are typically portrayed as a form of financial insurance, no
less useful than property and casualty insurance. This glossy rationale
masks the reality: if it is insurance then a currency option is akin to
buying theft insurance to protect against flood risk.
The truth is that the range of truly non-speculative uses for currency
options, arising from the normal operations of a company, is quite small. In
reality currency options do provide excellent vehicles for corporates'
speculative positioning in the guise of hedging. Corporates would go better
if they didn't believe the disguise was real.
Let's start with six of the most common myths about the benefits of FX
options to the international corporation -- myths that damage shareholder
values.
- Myth One. Writing covered options is safe, and can earn money, as long as the company has the underlying currency to deliver.
- Myth Two. Buying puts or calls to hedge a known foreign currency exposure
offers upside potential without the risk of speculating on the currency.
- Myth Three. Options can be the best hedge for accounting exposure.
- Myth Four. Options offer a useful way to hedge foreign currency exposures
without the risk of reporting derivative exposures.
- Myth Five. Selling an option is better than using forwards or swaps when
the counterparty is risky, because the option buyer cannot default.
- Myth Six. Currency options offer the ideal way to hedge uncertain exposures
such as contract bids.
Myth One. Covered Calls are Safe.
When Dell Computer Company was found to be selling naked currency puts and
calls, Michael Dell was condemned for speculating with company money. To
escape similar criticism many managements have gone on record as admitting
only to covered option writing. Here are the words of Rolls-Royce brass on
this topic.
"We do believe that the buying and writing of options can complement our
hedging policy. ... We will in no event ever write options if there is no
requirement to have the underlying there in the first place -- that is, we
will not write naked options."
- Mark Morris, financial risk manager, quoted in "No Fear of Options
Here," Corporate Finance, July 1994, p. 44.
What Rolls-Royce fails to recognize is that covered option writing is just as
risky as naked option writing. For example, the company that has a
yen-denominated receivable, and writes a call, giving someone else the right
to buy these yen, ends up with a combination of a long outright position and
a short call. The sum of these two is the equivalent to writing a put option
on yen. Therefore, the covered writer is a sheer speculator too. More
generally, whenever a corporate writes a covered option of one kind (put or
call) it is in effect writing a naked option of the other kind. (See Figure
1)
Figure 1. Writing Covered Options. When Rolls-Royce sells sterling puts
against the dollars it receives from U.S. sales, it's creating a naked call
position. The diagram shows how combining the sale of an option with an
underlying position in a currency creates the equivalent of a naked short
position in the opposite option.
Myth Two. Buying puts offers riskless potential for gain.
The corporate that says it is using options to hedge a known exposure and
then use it to seek riskless upside is in reality in the position of a
speculator. Why? Because the company ends up hedging a symmetric currency
risk with an asymmetric contract. Figure 2 shows how.
Figure 2. Hedging Long or Short Positions with Options. If Ford is owed Japanese yen by Nissan in payment for exported parts, and buys a yen put to hedge the currency exposure, the company has created a synthetic long call. In general, combining an
underlying currency position with a long call or put creates the equivalent
of a long position in the opposite option.
The long position is the foreign currency receivable, ostensibly "hedged"
with a put option. The sum of the two is equivalent to buying a call.
Instead of reducing or eliminating risk, as the spin-doctors would claim,
this strategy actually creates another risk exposure.
Myth Three. Options are a great hedge against accounting exposure.
This is surely one of the most pervasive of the six myths. It is the
conventional wisdom that if a firm has an accounting exposure in a foreign
currency that does not correspond to its economic exposure then they will
incur translation gains and losses as the currency rises or falls. The
popular remedy for this is to buy forward contracts. There is a fly in the
ointment, however. Because the translation gains are bookkeeping entries,
while the forward contract may produce real cash losses, which can be hard to
justify.
To avoid this prospect the firm hedges its long, say, yen exposure by buying
yen put options -- figuring if the yen falls it will have a translation loss
that is offset by a real cash gain on the option. Should the yen rise,
alternatively, the firm will post a balance sheet gain while the option is
allowed to expire -- its premium is treated as a cost of "insurance".
This argument has a kind of superficial appeal, to be sure. If the long
foreign currency exposure is merely a fiction, the firm has created a long
put position which is subject to the risk of option price fluctuations. If
on the other hand one believes that the balance sheet gains or losses have
true economic value, then they are symmetrical and we have created a long
call position. It might happen, of course, that a firm recognizes these
facts but still likes the options hedging idea for purely cosmetic reasons.
In which case it must accept that the cost of cosmetics is equivalent to the
extent to which a open, unmanaged option's position can add to the
variability of real cash flows. And that can amount to a lot of lipstick.
Myth Four. Options are good for avoiding the "d" word.
Suppose a company has real economic FX exposures -- distinct from accounting
and translation exposures -- it may nonetheless be driven into options for
quite the wrong reasons. Here the culprit is the reluctance of company
managers to report derivatives losses of any kind -- even those that are
legitimate hedges. Generally Accepted Accounting Practices would force a
marking to market, that is to book a loss in forwards or futures whenever the
currency moved in favor of their natural position. So managers are drawn to
the siren song of options because there is no chance of a loss. The option
premium is amortized on a straight-line basis over the life of the option --
just as if it were an "insurance" policy.
Myth Five. Finessing counterparty risks.
There is a kinky shape to an option's pay off. Because buyers of conventional
currency options purchase a right but not an obligation. Thus the risk of
default is totally on the writer, while the option buyer's creditworthiness
is completely irrelevant -- provided he has paid the option premium first!
Thus, there may well be a situation faced by a corporate with respect to
creditworthiness of a customer that would not support the use of a symmetric
derivative, such as a longer term currency swap. So then, the argument goes,
the same hedging needs can be met with an admittedly second-best solution --
i.e. options. But remember that such a use is justifiable only because
adequate credit lines are not available to the option buyer.
But before option seller shouts hooray, they should consider a sobering fact.
There may be cheaper ways for the corporation to reach the same goal. Credit
risk can be handled through collaterization, securitization, for example.
Credit shifting with options is only one of several routes -- not necessarily
the cheapest.
Myth Six. Options offset unpredictable FX inflows.
Marketers of options often claim that currency options are ideal instruments
for hedging uncertain foreign currency cash flows, because the option gives
the corporation the right to purchase or sell the foreign currency cash flow
if a company wins an offshore contract say, but no obligation to do so if
their bid is rejected. It has a surface logic: in which a contingent claim
offsets a contingent event. The drawback of this approach, however, is that
most of the time you have claims contingent on two different events. Winning
or losing the contract depends on your competition and a host of "real"
factors, while gains or losses on the option are dependent on movements of
the currency and its variability.
A firm buying an option to hedge the foreign currency in a tender bid is
paying for currency volatility and in fact taking a position in the options
market that will not be extinguished by the success or otherwise of its bid.
In other words, whether or not the bid is accepted, the option will be
exercised if it is in the money at expiration and not otherwise, and the
options price will rise and fall as the probability of exercise changes. In
buying the "hedge," the bidder is actually purchasing a risky security whose
value will continue to fluctuate even after the outcome of the bid is known.
Are Currency Options Ever Useful?
Yes, in certain well-defined situations,
but these are situations that, I believe, that few companies seem to grasp.
There is one kind of foreign currency cash flow for which the conventional
currency option is perfectly suited: that is the rare exception where the
probability of a company's foreign currency receipts or payments depends on
the exchange rate. Then both the natural exposure and the hedging instrument
have payoffs that are exchange rate contingent and a currency option is
exactly the right kind of hedge.
By way of illustration, consider an American firm that sells in Germany and
issues a price list in German marks. If the mark falls against the dollar,
the Germans will buy your doodads, but of course you will get less dollars
per doodad. If the mark rises, the clever Germans will instead buy from your
distributor in New Jersey whose price list they also have. Your dollar
revenues are constant if the mark rises but fall if the mark drops. Perhaps
you were dumb to fix prices in both currencies; what you have effectively
done is to give away a currency option. This asymmetric currency risk can be
neatly hedged with a put option on DM.
A variation on the above could be one where the company's profitability
depends in some asymmetric fashion on a currency's value, but in a more
complex way than that described by conventional options. An example might be
where competitive analysis demonstrates that should a particular foreign
currency fall to a certain level, as measured by the average spot rate over
three months, then producers in that country would gear up for production and
would take away market share or force margins down. Anticipation of such an
event could call for purchasing so-called Asian options, where the payoff
depends not on the exchange rate in effect on the day of expiration, but on
an average of rates over some period.
There are some other situations that could justify the use of currency
options. And one of these is averting the costs of financial distress.
Hedging can under some circumstances reduce the cost of debt: for instance
when it reduces the expected costs of bankruptcy to creditors, or of
financial distress to shareholders, or if it allows greater leverage and
hence increases the tax shield afforded by debt finance. Where fluctuations
in the firm's value can be directly attributed to exchange rate movements,
the firm may be best off buying a out-of-the-money currency options. In such
a case it would be buying insurance only against the extreme exchange rate
that would put the firm into bankruptcy.
Where does that leave us?
The general rule about hedging tools is that
specific kinds of hedging tools are suited to specific kinds of currency
exposure. Whatever happens to your "natural" positions, such as a foreign
currency asset, you want a hedge whose value changes in precisely the
opposite fashion. Thus forwards are okay for many hedging purposes, because
the firms' natural position tends to gain or lose one-for-one with the
exchange rate. (Even this is often untrue.)
But the kind of exposure for which foreign exchange options are the perfect
hedge are much rarer, because contracts are not won or lost solely because of
an exchange rate change. A currency option is the perfect hedge only for the
kind of exposure that results from the firm itself having granted an implicit
currency option to another party. Usually, currency options offer an
imperfect hedge, while plain, boring old forward contracts can do the job
more effectively.
An Afternote
Are Options a Good Way of Taking Limited-Risk Currency Positions?
Frequently corporate treasurers use options to get the best of both worlds:
hedging combined with a view. Their actions and statements suggest that many
believe currency options are a good way to profit from anticipated moves in
the currency. They are not. Option-based positioning is far more complicated
than outright long or short exposures. The reason is that the gain or loss
from an option is a non-linear function of the currency's value, and that the
relationship is not stable but varies with anticipated volatility, with time,
and with the level of interest rates. For these reasons, options are not
ideal speculative instruments for corporations.
Ian H. Giddy, Professor of Finance
New York University Salomon Center • Stern School of Business
44 West 4th Street, New York 10012
Tel 212 998-0704 • Fax 212 995-4220
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Go to Giddy's Web Portal • Contact Ian Giddy at igiddy@stern.nyu.edu