Offshore and Translation exposure: Difference between pages

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1.
''Foreign exchange risk''.


The siting of a currency asset in a location other than the country of which the currency is the domestic currency.
Translation exposure refers to foreign exchange or currency risk. It is the risk of adverse effects in a firm’s reported financial statements, or related financial ratios or borrowing covenant compliance, resulting from changes in the rates at which foreign currency-denominated assets, liabilities, income or costs are translated into the reporting currency.


For example, a holding of Japanese yen in the United States (which would also be known as 'Euroyen').
This applies most commonly to the translation of monetary assets and liabilities and to the consolidation of non-domestic subsidiaries into group financial statements.


If the changes in exchange rates were to reverse, the effects on the related amounts in the financial statements would normally also reverse.


2.


The term is also used in the context of transactions with a company resident in a tax haven, or about a company itself resident in a tax haven.
Also known as translation risk, translational risk or translational exposure.




== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[CNH]]
* [[Accounting exposure]]
* [[CNY]]
* [[Balance sheet exposure]]
* [[Euro]]
* [[Convert]]
* [[Euromarket]]
* [[Currency risk]]
* [[Finance vehicle]]
* [[Current/non-current method]]
* [[Offshore fund]]
* [[Economic exposure]]
* [[Onshore]]
* [[Foreign exchange risk]]
* [[Reshore]]
* [[Income statement exposure]]
* [[Tax haven]]
* [[Transaction exposure]]
* [[Translate]]


[[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]]
 
[[Category:The_business_context]]
==Other resource==
[[Category:Financial_products_and_markets]]
[http://www.treasurers.org/node/9528 Treasury essentials: Translation Risk, Will Spinney, The Treasurer, Nov 2013]
 
[[Category:Manage_risks]]

Latest revision as of 11:17, 11 September 2022

Foreign exchange risk.

Translation exposure refers to foreign exchange or currency risk. It is the risk of adverse effects in a firm’s reported financial statements, or related financial ratios or borrowing covenant compliance, resulting from changes in the rates at which foreign currency-denominated assets, liabilities, income or costs are translated into the reporting currency.

This applies most commonly to the translation of monetary assets and liabilities and to the consolidation of non-domestic subsidiaries into group financial statements.

If the changes in exchange rates were to reverse, the effects on the related amounts in the financial statements would normally also reverse.


Also known as translation risk, translational risk or translational exposure.


See also


Other resource

Treasury essentials: Translation Risk, Will Spinney, The Treasurer, Nov 2013