Eurobonds account for a much larger share of borrowing than foreign bonds today, roughly by a factor of five. (Eurobonds were invented only in 1957, but the annual nominal issuing value had reached around $1 trillion by 2000, with outstanding debt of over $4 trillion.) Eurobonds are issued by corporations foreign to the host country in which they are issued, but in contrast to foreign bonds, they are denominated in non-host country currency. For example, when Ford issues a dollar denominated bond in Japan, it is a Eurobond despite the name. (As you saw in the last series of posts, when Ford issues a yen-denominated bond in Japan, it would be called a foreign bond.) Therefore, depending on the currency that they are issued in, they may or may not serve a hedging role. The first important public Eurobond issue was an 1822 bearer bond, issued by Russia, denominated in British pounds, and payable at Rothschild bank offices anywhere in the world.) For U.S. companies issuing in Europe or Japan, the Eurobond market is often less a mechanism to hedge currency risk (many of their issues are denominated in U.S. dollars), as it is a mechanism to escape the regulation and supervision of the SEC. The institutional customs and features of Eurobonds are more flexible and somewhat different from those that apply to ordinary U.S. bonds. (The typical issue costs are about 25 to 50 basis points of the market price.)
Another very large market for corporate financing is the issue-and-swap market. A company like Disney may feel that its name recognition in the United States allows it a better borrowing rate in the United States than in Japan, even though it really wants to issue yen debt; while a company like Matsushita may feel that its name recognition in Japan allows it a better borrowing rate in Japan than in the United States, even though it really wants to issue dollar debt. An investment bank arranges for these firms to raise capital in their host countries, where it is cheap for them, and then sets up a swap. In this swap, Matsushita pays Disney’s debt service and Disney pays Matsushita’s debt service. The complication is that, although the obligations are a fairly close match at the outset, over time, one loan may become more valuable than the other. To reduce the risk of default, a large AAA-rated company (such as an insurance company) guarantees performance in exchange for upfront payment. So if Matsushita were to go bankrupt and could no longer pay for Disney’s debt, Disney would then no longer pay for Matsushita’s debt, either, and the difference would have to be picked up by the AAA guarantor.
Eurobonds and the Issue-and-Swap Market
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Hedging with Foreign Financing
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Yet another method of hedging for corporations is to match assets and liabilities: if a firm has an asset (such as a foreign operation) that has a net present value of €100, then it can create a liability that is also worth €100. The easiest way to do this is to raise the financing for the asset not in U.S. dollars but in euros. If an operation has borrowed €100 and is worth €100, the currency risk on the assets itself almost disappears: currency risk remains only in the earnings performance of the euro subsidiary.
If we raise this capital in the foreign host country itself, it may also mitigate political risk: if a revolution were to occur in Germany and our operations were nationalized, chances are that we would not be liable to pay German investors and lenders. This type of hedge is accomplished with foreign bonds, which have been around for at least a hundred years. They are issued by corporations foreign to the host country in which they are issued and denominated in host country currency. They are named differently in different countries— Yankee Bonds in the United States (i.e., issued by a non-U.S. corporation), Samurai Bonds in Japan, matador bonds in Spain, and Bulldog Bonds in Great Britain. For example, when Ford Motors issues a Japanese- yen bond in Tokyo, it would be a Samurai Bond.