Cost behaviour and Non-deliverable forward: Difference between pages

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(NDF). A foreign currency financial derivative contract. An NDF differs from an outright foreign currency forward contract in that there is no physical settlement of two currencies at maturity. Rather, a net cash settlement is made by one party to the other.


Cost behaviour analysis recognises that only certain costs will change as overall activity levels change. Cost behaviour describes the way in which costs behave as activity level changes in the business.
NDFs are commonly used to hedge foreign currency risks in emerging markets where local currencies are not freely convertible, or where there are restrictions on capital movements. An NDF market might then develop in an offshore financial centre, with contracts settled in major foreign currencies, such as the US dollar.


== See also ==
* [[Contract for differences]]
* [[Foreign exchange forward contract]]


== See also ==
* [[Fixed cost]]
* [[Variable cost]

Revision as of 14:20, 23 October 2012

(NDF). A foreign currency financial derivative contract. An NDF differs from an outright foreign currency forward contract in that there is no physical settlement of two currencies at maturity. Rather, a net cash settlement is made by one party to the other.

NDFs are commonly used to hedge foreign currency risks in emerging markets where local currencies are not freely convertible, or where there are restrictions on capital movements. An NDF market might then develop in an offshore financial centre, with contracts settled in major foreign currencies, such as the US dollar.

See also