Transferable risk: Difference between revisions
imported>Doug Williamson (Note that the bank will price the transaction to earn a profit.) |
imported>Doug Williamson (Generalise to cover organisations, including not-for-profits, and give fuller example.) |
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Risks can usefully be classified as 'transferable' or 'non-transferable'. | |||
Transferable risks are those which can be transferred to someone else, at a price. | |||
Ways of transferring these risks include hedging with risk management products, or passing the risk to an insurer. | |||
In these ways and others, we can remove transferable risks from our organisation, if we choose to. | |||
Naturally the bank will price the foreign exchange transaction so that it earns an appropriate reward for accepting and managing the | <b>Example</b> | ||
An exporter sells to an overseas customer in foreign currency. | |||
The exporter has a transferable foreign exchange risk on the domestic currency equivalent of the future sales receipt. | |||
The exporter can eliminate this risk by entering into a forward foreign exchange contract with a bank, effectively fixing the domestic currency equivalent of the receipt. What was initially the exporter's foreign exchange risk has now become the bank's risk. | |||
Naturally the bank will price the foreign exchange transaction so that it earns an appropriate reward for accepting and managing the risk. | |||
Revision as of 09:07, 30 May 2015
Risks can usefully be classified as 'transferable' or 'non-transferable'.
Transferable risks are those which can be transferred to someone else, at a price.
Ways of transferring these risks include hedging with risk management products, or passing the risk to an insurer.
In these ways and others, we can remove transferable risks from our organisation, if we choose to.
Example
An exporter sells to an overseas customer in foreign currency.
The exporter has a transferable foreign exchange risk on the domestic currency equivalent of the future sales receipt.
The exporter can eliminate this risk by entering into a forward foreign exchange contract with a bank, effectively fixing the domestic currency equivalent of the receipt. What was initially the exporter's foreign exchange risk has now become the bank's risk.
Naturally the bank will price the foreign exchange transaction so that it earns an appropriate reward for accepting and managing the risk.