ARE DOMESTIC FIRMS EXPOSED TO SIMILAR CURRENCY RISK AS INTERNATIONAL TRADING FIRMS?

This paper reports key findings about currency risk using two samples of listed firms: one sample with zero foreign currency revenues, hence having zero-currency risk; and the other sample with positive revenues in foreign currencies from foreign transactions. The latter is therefore, exposed to cu...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mohamed Ariff Syed Mohamed, Alireza Zarei
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universiti Utara Malaysia 2022-06-01
Series:The International Journal of Banking and Finance
Subjects:
Online Access:https://e-journal.uum.edu.my/index.php/ijbf/article/view/15059
Description
Summary:This paper reports key findings about currency risk using two samples of listed firms: one sample with zero foreign currency revenues, hence having zero-currency risk; and the other sample with positive revenues in foreign currencies from foreign transactions. The latter is therefore, exposed to currency risk. Asset pricing theories predict that stocks of currency-risk-exposed firms should suffer significant currency risk, while those firms with zero-currency-risk should not have any effect from currency risk since currency transactions across borders is nil. The latter hypothesis has yet to be tested explicitly, so there is a gap in the literature. We report stock returns are significantly affected not just for firms with foreign-currency revenues but also for firms with zero foreign-currency transactions. These findings are useful to top management of all businesses to undertake currency-hedge plans for both domestic and international trading firms.
ISSN:2811-3799
2590-423X