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Currency Strategy
Book

Currency Strategy

The Practitioner's Guide to Currency Investing, Hedging and Forecasting

Wiley, 2002 más...

audio autogenerado
audio autogenerado

Editorial Rating

6

Qualities

  • Overview

Recommendation

In 1971, President Richard Nixon ended the convertibility of the dollar into gold and thereby scotched the mechanism of international agreements and regulations that had governed the world monetary system since the end of World War II. Over the ensuing decades, the once-stable global monetary environment became an exciting, volatile new source of risk and opportunity. Manufacturers saw their fortunes rise and fall as currency shifts favored them or, alternatively, their competitors overseas. Financial institutions discovered new opportunities and dangers in fast-moving currency markets. getAbstract.com recommends this book for its detailed and generally clear, albeit often tedious, introduction to the tools, techniques and strategies readers may use to manage risk or speculate in the world’s biggest financial arena - the unregulated international currency market.

Take-Aways

  • Every business has currency risk. Even companies in one country using one currency can suffer from currency shifts that benefit foreign competitors.
  • Every company needs to identify its currency risk and a strategy for managing it.
  • Currency hedging is usually the responsibility of the treasury department, whose mission statement should include a risk management strategy relating to currency.

About the Author

Callum Henderson heads Emerging EMEA Strategy for a leading U.S. investment bank based in London. He was formerly part of the Citibank FX Strategy team and Manager of FX Analysis in Asia for Standard & Poors. He has written three previous books about Asian economics, including Asia Falling, Asian Dawn and China on the Brink.


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