Dollar borrowing, firm-characteristics, and FX-hedged funding opportunities

Dollar borrowing, firm-characteristics, and FX-hedged funding opportunities

Series: Working Papers. 2005.

Author: Leonardo Gambacorta, Sergio Mayordomo and José María Serena.

Topics: Cash, coins and banknotes | Quantitative methods | Exchange rates | Financial risks | Credit.

Publicado en: Journal of Corporate Finance. Volume 68, Jun 2021, Art 101945Opens in new window

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Abstract

We explore the link between firms’ dollar bond borrowing and their FX-hedged funding
opportunities, as reflected in a positive corporate basis (the relative cost of local to synthetic currency borrowing). Consistent with previous research, we first document that firms substitute domestic for dollar borrowing when they have higher dollar revenues or long-term assets and when the corporate basis widens. Importantly, our novel firm-level dataset enables to show that when these funding opportunities appear, the currency substitution is stronger for very high-grade firms, as they can offer to investors close substitutes for safe dollar assets. However, firms with higher dollar revenues or long-term assets do not react to changes in the corporate basis. Altogether, the composition of dollar borrowers shifts when the basis widens, as high-grade firms gain importance, relative to firms with operational needs.

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