Definition
Translation Exposure
Translation exposure is the accounting impact on a company's consolidated financials when foreign-currency assets, liabilities and earnings are converted into the reporting currency.
An Indian multinational with a US subsidiary must restate that subsidiary's dollar balance sheet and profits into rupees each reporting period. When the rupee depreciates, the dollar earnings translate into more rupees, flattering reported profit even with no real change in business.
Unlike transaction exposure (real cash flows), translation exposure is an accounting effect with no immediate cash impact, but it affects reported book value and can swing consolidated results. Firms may hedge it selectively to reduce earnings volatility.
Related terms
- USDINRUSDINR is the exchange rate of the US dollar against the Indian rupee, the most-watched currency pair in India and a key barometer of capital flows and import costs.
- Hedging Forex RiskHedging forex risk means using forwards, futures, options or swaps to lock in or limit the exchange-rate cost of future foreign-currency cash flows.
- Natural HedgeA natural hedge offsets currency risk through the structure of a business itself, such as matching foreign-currency revenues with foreign-currency costs, rather than using derivatives.
- Transaction ExposureTransaction exposure is the risk that a known future foreign-currency cash flow will be worth more or less in home currency by the time it is settled.
Plain-English explainer from The Dispatch Investors Encyclopedia. General information, not financial advice.