Honeywell
Honeywell
Honeywell
Corporate Risk and General Insurance: Prof. Sojung Park Aaron Tal
program.
Appendix:
Honeywells Treasury Risk Management Units: 1. Capital markets unit a. Capital structure risks (liquidity risk) 2. Cash management unit 3. Financial risk management unit a. Currency risk, interest rate risk, credit risk 4. Insurance risk management unit a. Risks traditionally covered by insurance (pure risks) b. General liability, property, product liability, automobile liability, employer liability, ocean marine transit and workers compensation risk Honeywells' Insurance Policies: Honeywell used separated annually renewable insurance policies for each type of insurable risk. Each policy had specified deductibles in an amount that ranged between zero and $6 million. Honeywell would absorb any losses up to the retention level before it received any insurance payments for a loss (attaching). Each loss was subject to a separate retention. Transaction risk: (contractual risk): is the specific exposure faced by a firm when it enter into a contract with a future payoff. In the context of foreign operations the future payment can be subject to exchange-rate risk. To mitigate this risk, a firm can can take a long position in the currency of the contract. Honeywell used such a strategy to manage transaction risk. Translation risk: It refers to the difference in reported earnings that can occur when a domestic firm translates its earnings denominated in foreign currency back into its domestic currency. It might to do for reporting purposes ( international financial statements ). The reporting-based translation from foreign currency into domestic currency may or may not represent repatriation or actual exchanges. In order to hedge such exchange-rate exposures Honeywell used at-the-money options as well as basket-options consisting of 20 currencies, representing 85% of Honeywells foreign profits.
By Aaron Tal
Corporate Risk and General Insurance: Prof. Sojung Park Aaron Tal