Eurobonds, Not Just
For Europeans
When even the Iranian government floats Eurobonds, you know
there's something funny about the term.
There's a difference between a eurobond and a foreign bond, even
from the perspective of a non-European. A Eurobond is a bond issued
and traded in a country other than the one in which it's currency
is denominated.
Not all originate or circulate in Europe, though most are issued
by non-European companies or governments to be traded by European
investors. For example, the French government issues
euro-denominated bonds (the Franc was discontinued in 2002) that
buy and sell on Japanese financial markets. Issuers get creative. A
Eurobond can be denominated in U.S. dollars, but issued in Japan by
an Australian company. Even Wal-Mart issues bonds in U.S. dollars
that trade on the German exchanges.
In fact, most new issues in the international bond market are
Eurobonds and it's now larger than the U.S. bond market. (The
latter is over $14 trillion total.)
Eurobonds give issuers some additional tools for creative
financing, since they can choose a country based on regulatory and
tax environment. Investors benefit by having more to choose
from.
Eurobonds do carry extra risk, though.
Most investors are moderately familiar with conditions in their
own country. But even in this day of Internet-available
international news and financial information, events elsewhere are
usually much less well tracked.
Added to the natural ignorance of events far away is the
significant risk of foreign currency trading. Compared to the size
of currency markets, bond trading is small. The equivalent of over
$1.5 trillion dollars per day changes hands in the foreign currency
markets. By comparison, U.S. Treasury Securities trade around $360
billion per day.
And currency exchange is significantly more volatile - with
wider price swings over shorter time frames and greater sensitivity
to momentary political changes. Currency risk occurs on longer time
frames as well, though.
A bond bought today generally matures a few years later.
Suppose, a U.S. investor pays £1,000 (~$1,770 today, hence £1 GBP =
$1.77USD today) for a new eurobond which is held to maturity and
repaid five years later. When repaid, the issuer repays in GBP
(British Pounds) on the face value, £1,000. But in the interim, the
exchange rate has changed to £1 = $1.66. The investor will be paid
back the equivalent of $1,660. (And this example ignores any
complicating factors of local inflation.)
The $110 loss comes entirely from currency risk. Of course, the
scales tip both ways. It's possible, and just as likely, for
currency rates to change in favor of the investor. The exchange
rate may change so that £1 = $1.88.
But then the investment becomes one not merely of bond trading
but currency speculation. Not a bad investment medium, millions
make enormous sums that way every day, but a much riskier
market.
As with any investment, research - both of the historical
circumstances of the issuer, as well as current data - is
fundamental to making reasonable estimates of future returns. But
for those willing to make the effort, the rise of the Internet, the
consolidation of European financial markets around the turn of the
millennium and other social changes make global investing a new
avenue for profit.
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