Guide to Analysing Companies
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FINANCE Essencial finance
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- Foreign direct investment
- Foreign exchange
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FORECASTING 143 02 Essential Finance 10/11/06 2:22 PM Page 143 for the market. The answer will suggest whether investors should buy or sell its shares. Foreign bond A bond denominated in a currency foreign to the issuer, and sold in the domestic market of the currency of issue – for example, a Swiss franc bond issued by a Japanese company and sold in Switzerland. (See also eurobond.) Foreign direct investment The purchase by a commercial organisation of assets overseas for the purpose of investment. Such assets might include green- field sites, where a factory or office is to be built from scratch, or a sizeable stake (usually over 50% if regulations allow) of an ex- isting company that is already operating in the foreign market. Flows of foreign direct investment (fdi) can have a profound effect on a developing economy. Maintaining the economy’s equilibrium in the face of a flood of investment can be as diffi- cult as coping with the consequences when, for whatever reason, the flow is suddenly turned off. Foreign exchange The means through which payments are made between one country and another. banks and their customers are the main- stay of the foreign-exchange (forex) markets. The markets started out as the servants of trade but, during the past 20 years or so, they have undoubtedly become one of its masters. Every day in the forex markets traders place buy-and-sell orders worth more than $2 trillion, most of them in pursuit of short- term (that is, overnight) gain. This is more than the value of all the cars, wheat, oil and other products bought and sold in the real economy every day. As well as dealing in physical currency (for example, from F 144 FOREIGN BOND 02 Essential Finance 10/11/06 2:22 PM Page 144 dollars to yen or vice versa), traders routinely use derivatives (futures, options and the like) to give them extra leverage or to hedge against the risk of possible losses. This gives the markets power not just to influence events but sometimes also to profit from them. In 1992, George Soros made $1 billion from betting correctly that the UK would be forced out of Europe’s exchange rate mechanism. Forfaiting Also known as à forfait, the business of discounting a finan- cial instrument that is being used to finance the export of capital goods. banks buy the instruments at a discount and then trade them. The forfait market grew up in Switzerland, where it concentrated on buying east–west trade debt, but its name became increasingly anglicised (from à forfait to forfait- ing) as the market shifted to London in the 1980s. Forgery A counterfeit coin, note or document that tries to pass as some- thing that it is not. Forgeries often involve the copying of other people’s signatures. To make forgery as difficult as possible, the printing of notes has become a highly specialised task that in- volves sophisticated technical processes. Download 1.1 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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