JABM JOURNAL of ACCOUNTING - BUSINESS & MANAGEMENT
Vol 16 No 1 (2009): April

The Effects of the Use of Corporate Derivatives on the Foreign Exchange Rate Exposure

Mohammad Al-Shbou (University of Sharjah)
Stewart Alison (Unknown)



Article Info

Publish Date
06 Apr 2009

Abstract

Corporate governance can provide mechanisms to effectively monitor the use of derivatives. In light of this, this study investigates the impact of the use of derivative on the foreign exchange-rate risk exposure with respect to the firm's ownership structure for a sample of 62 Australian multinational corporations. A two-stage market model is used. The first stage of this model is the use of a two-factor asset pricing model to estimate the foreign exchange exposure coefficients. The second stage of this model is the use of a cross-sectional regression model which regresses these estimated coefficients against the proxy for the use of derivatives with respect to the control variables such as the proxies for firm's ownership structure. The study finds that the use of foreign currency derivatives is associated with exposure reduction. The percentages of shares held by block-holders and institutions are found to be significantly positively related to foreign exchange risk exposure, while the percentages of shares held by directors are not significantly associated to exposure. Therefore, further research might explore the relationship between a firms ownership structure and its hedging activities more.

Copyrights © 2009






Journal Info

Abbrev

Publisher

Subject

Decision Sciences, Operations Research & Management Economics, Econometrics & Finance Other

Description

Journal of Accounting, Business and Management (JABM) provides a scientific discourse about accounting, business, and management both practically and conceptually. The published articles at this journal cover various topics from the result of particular conceptual analysis and critical evaluation to ...