Foreign exchange risk management has become an important investment tool for many businesses, not just a focus of Fortune 500 firms. But for every blog post or research paper lauding the benefits of currency hedging, just as many question the practice.
The multitude of opinions on foreign exchange risk management is driven by the increasing number of businesses conducting international transactions. Even small and newer companies maintain a level of foreign exchange rate risk through common activities like buying overseas supplies, selling products in another country and outsourcing tasks to foreign staff. Generally, anyone who makes non-local payments can be vulnerable to shifts in currency exchange rates. Despite owing a set amount each month to an international partner, the actual cost can fluctuate and, depending on the severity, affect a business’s bottom line.
Multinational enterprises have long employed foreign exchange risk strategies to offset unexpected losses either caused by currency fluctuations or exacerbated by them. And in today’s interconnected world, currency exchange hedging and risk management have taken on greater importance for businesses of all sizes.
Recognizing the significance of foreign currency risk, businesses engaging in international transactions must implement hedging strategies to mitigate the adverse effects of exchange rate fluctuations on investment returns.
What is currency risk?
Foreign exchange risk, or FX risk, is a crucial part of the equation on balance sheets for companies that buy, trade or sell goods and services across international borders in foreign currencies. Currency hedging refers to the unpredictable nature of exchange rates between two or more currencies. The purpose of hedging is to manage the risk of exposure, or financial loss, when the exchange rate fluctuates, especially if it does so unfavorably.
Businesses can opt for a set exchange rate to help avoid volatility and risk while trying to more accurately manage financial goals. They can also use hedging strategies.
When used effectively, FX risk management tools can help companies stabilize pricing or offset volatility in international markets. These foreign exchange hedges may also give companies an edge when expanding into new markets or help them gain an advantage over competitors.
However, foreign currency hedging strategies are not foolproof and involve inherent risks of their own.
This article examines the trends, tools and traps that businesses have to keep in mind as they navigate the often unpredictable FX market.
Types of foreign exchange risk
Foreign exchange risk can be categorized into three main types: transaction risk, translation risk and economic risk. Understanding these categories is crucial for businesses engaged in international trade, as each type of risk can significantly impact growth and resilience.
Transaction risk
Transaction risk arises when a company agrees to buy or sell goods or services in a foreign currency, and the exchange rate shifts before the transaction is settled. This type of risk can lead to financial losses if the exchange rate moves unfavorably.
For example, imagine a US company agrees to purchase goods from a European supplier for €100,000. At the time of the agreement, the exchange rate is 1 EUR = 1.20 USD, meaning the US company expects to pay $120,000. However, if the exchange rate shifts to 1 EUR = 1.30 USD before the transaction is completed, the company will now need to pay $130,000, resulting in an unexpected loss of $10,000.
Managing transaction risk is essential to help ensure financial predictability.
Translation risk
Translation risk occurs when a company needs to convert the financial statements of its foreign subsidiaries into the parent company’s currency. Changes in exchange rates can affect the value of these financial statements, impacting the company’s overall financial performance.
For example, a US company with a subsidiary in Japan must translate the Japanese subsidiary’s financial statements, denominated in yen, into dollars. If the exchange rate between the yen and the dollar fluctuates, the translated value of the subsidiary’s financial statements will also change, potentially affecting the company’s reported earnings and financial health.
Understanding and managing translation risk is vital for companies with international operations to maintain accurate financial reporting.
Economic risk
Economic risk, also known as operating exposure, refers to the impact of exchange rate changes on a company’s future cash flows, revenues and expenses. This type of risk can affect a company’s overall financial performance and competitive position in the market.
For instance, a US company exporting goods to a foreign country may see its revenues fluctuate with changes in the exchange rate. If the foreign currency depreciates against the USD, the company’s products may become more expensive for foreign buyers, leading to a potential decrease in sales. Conversely, if the foreign currency appreciates, the company’s products may become more competitive, boosting sales.
Managing economic risk involves strategic planning and hedging.
The main benefits of hedging
One advantage of hedging is security: A business can accurately plan a fiscal budget, and the pricing of products and services can be maintained, as the cost is static. Foreign exchange rates can be unpredictable, and even traditionally stable currencies can be susceptible to movement based on market events or unforeseen circumstances.

The argument against foreign currency hedging
While the goal of hedging is managing FX exposure, businesses with irregular or small international payments may not necessarily be a candidate for the practice. Additionally, some market watchers fear missing out on a favorable spot rate, should they commit to a fixed one. While it’s true that some months a spot rate may be more favorable, there may also be months where having a fixed rate can save the business from taking a financial hit. *
Top three misconceptions about currency risk
- Speculation: While hedging is a risk management strategy, it can also be viewed as a form of speculation. Deciding on a fixed foreign currency exchange rate is itself a gamble as the FX market is unpredictable, and choosing to hedge does not guarantee the most favorable rate. While it’s true that hedging may not secure the most optimal rate, its primary objectives are to allow predictability and manage unexpected losses.
- Hedging is unnecessary in times of low volatility: There are periods in the market where major currencies are relatively stable and do not experience steep dips and rises for months at a time. During these cycles, critics of hedging often suggest that it’s pointless to bother with hedging. However, these phases rarely seem to last. It’s nearly impossible to predict shifts in the FX market, and businesses with concerns about their exposure may be better off hedging from the start, rather than waiting until after an unfavorable move.
- Flexible pricing: Some companies choose to adjust the pricing of their goods and services based on the shifts in currency. While a number of businesses have this freedom, an unexpected dip could mean that customers may be subject to an increase in cost at a future date, which could lead them to turn to a competitor.
With the basics covered, let’s turn to the trends affecting foreign exchange risk management.

Causes of currency fluctuations
Currency fluctuations can be driven by a variety of factors, including economic conditions, political events and market sentiment. Understanding these causes is essential for managing foreign exchange risk and making informed business decisions.
Economic factors
Economic factors play a significant role in causing currency fluctuations. Changes in interest rates, inflation rates and economic growth rates are among the primary drivers. For example, if a country’s central bank raises interest rates, it can attract foreign investors seeking higher returns, leading to an appreciation of the country’s currency. Conversely, if a country’s inflation rate rises, it can erode the currency’s value, causing depreciation. Economic growth rates also influence currency values; a country with robust economic growth may attract foreign investment, boosting its currency.
Other economic factors include trade balances, foreign exchange reserves and commodity prices. A country with a large trade deficit, where imports exceed exports, may see its currency depreciate due to higher demand for foreign currencies. On the other hand, a country with a trade surplus may experience currency appreciation.
Changes in foreign exchange reserves — the assets held by a central bank in foreign currencies — can also impact currency values. Additionally, fluctuations in commodity prices, such as oil or gold, can affect the currencies of countries that are major exporters or importers of these commodities.
Overall, understanding the economic factors that cause currency fluctuations is crucial for managing foreign exchange risk and making strategic business decisions. By staying informed about these factors, businesses can better anticipate currency movements and implement effective risk management strategies.
Current trends in foreign exchange risk management
The foreign exchange, or forex, is the world’s largest financial market, with $6.6 trillion in daily trading. That makes it a very liquid but often volatile marketplace.

Trend 1: Central banks and currency fluctuations
Central banks around the world have been lowering interest rates. This is a policy course reversal for many major central banks, including the US Federal Reserve, which in September cut its overnight lending rate for banks by half a percentage point. It’s the first time the Fed has reduced the benchmark rate since the pandemic. It joined half a dozen other major central banks that have also been cutting rates, including the European Central Bank (ECB), the Swiss National Bank and the Bank of Canada.
The rate reductions in developed markets this year have been the biggest since the COVID-19 pandemic sent shock waves through global markets in March 2020. In general, lower interest rates equate to weaker currencies.
Many economists and markets are banking on additional cuts in interest rates over 2025 and into 2026. They are also watching to see which countries will cut the deepest and how quickly they will stop. For instance, the US Fed started cutting rates after the ECB, but it may continue lowering rates after the ECB stops its rate-cutting cycle. This trend may eventually weaken the USD vs. EUR over the next few years.
Meanwhile, central banks in Japan, South Korea and Taiwan have been holding rates steady this year or raising them, which can increase the value of those currencies vis-à-vis the US dollar and other exchange rates.
Emerging market currencies are often the most volatile, but higher interest rates in many of these countries have led to better FX returns for some companies. Many market watchers predict that this particular hedge may be less financially sustainable, or soon come to an end, because the value of the emerging market currencies may decline in lockstep with their countries’ declining interest rates.
Trend 2: Economic growth vs. inflation
While central bank monetary policy, such as raising or lowering interest rates, has always been a key driver for FX developments, it’s not the only focus for exchange rates.
Falling rates of inflation in many nations have been the underlying reason for the shift in policy by the US Fed and other central banks. As these inflationary pressures continue declining, there will be renewed focus on whether economic growth is slowing. And if growth slows too much too quickly, then the focus turns toward a potential recession.
That would then likely force banks to cut rates deeper and/or more quickly than market watchers and hedgers anticipate — creating volatile FX markets and exchanges.
Download our full 2025 market outlook and help prepare your business for the year ahead.
Trend 3: Geopolitical risks
- Wars: As if worrying about the business cycle and interest rates weren’t enough, external events can produce shocks to the system. War, for example. The ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine and the potential for an expanded and protracted conflict in the Middle East present ongoing headline risk in financial markets and economies around the world.
- Government elections: Investors react to election campaigns and outcomes, driving changes in currency value based on perceived fiscal and monetary direction.
- Trade disputes: There is also the ongoing China-US trade dispute, including the tariffs levied on Chinese goods and the potential for an expansion of this program.
- USD reserve: Despite the uncertainty and potential volatility across markets, the news of the dollar’s demise as the world’s reserve currency has been premature, if not greatly exaggerated. The USD’s share of global reserves has lost little ground to the euro over the past quarter century, and it remains the most liquid market. And the bulk of cross-border claims and liabilities are still denominated in dollars, so it remains a currency of choice for many private-sector transactions.

Tools to help build a successful FX risk management strategy
To help mitigate foreign exchange risk, a business must start by identifying its exposure to shifts in currency exchange rates, and then implement strategies and deploy financial instruments that help make cash flow more predictable.
Scenario analysis is key to managing foreign exchange risk
Scenario analysis is a good way to explore the ramifications of potential future market events on currency value, and therefore a business’s cash flow. By considering the impact of various hypothetical market situations on the currency pairs (the exchange rate between two currencies) a business deals with, a business can better anticipate and understand its currency risk.
Ideally, this analysis should cover a range of scenarios, such as an optimistic, pessimistic and a “most likely” scenario. Each scenario must have an accompanying financial model of how it might impact revenues, margins and cash flows, based on historical data showing the outcomes of economic events on exchange rates.
After modeling financial impacts, the results of each scenario can help determine the business’s sensitivity to currency fluctuations and which scenarios pose the greatest FX risk.
For example, an appliance distributor might use these analyses to understand how market fluctuations could raise costs for imported goods. Based on the scenario analysis, the distributor can develop or adjust its currency risk management strategy by changing the hedging tools it uses, adjusting pricing models or even diversifying its currency exposures.
Maintaining financial health
Meeting financial objectives is a primary goal for companies, especially when their business is conducted across borders, introducing FX uncertainty and volatility onto the balance sheet.
There are many ways to hedge against these types of losses. This applies to any size company that makes non-local payments, even regularly scheduled installments, as the actual cost can fluctuate.
Many multinational enterprises try to mitigate FX issues by sitting on mounds of cash, often spread across different countries. But this can make overall positions unclear and may not be the most cost-effective way to manage cash and keep transaction costs low.
Certainly, one advantage of hedging is security. It helps a CFO accurately plan a fiscal budget, and the business can maintain the pricing of products and services, as the cost is static.
Here are some popular methods of hedging the bottom line from FX headwinds:
- Notional pooling
- Financial instruments:
- Forward contracts
- Options contracts
- Swap agreements
- Market orders
- Natural hedging
Notional pooling
Automate and optimize funding with multi-currency notional pooling. This is more of a short-term working capital tool that lets companies combine the balances of multiple accounts into a single net balance without making physical fund transfers and maintaining individual account positions.
It allows for centralized control for cash flow and FX exposure, particularly useful for companies with autonomous operating units. This can help cut costs, streamline accounts and avoid overdraft penalties while lowering the number of needed FX transactions.
However, notional pooling is allowed only in some locations.
Financial instruments for hedging
Many companies seeking to manage their foreign currency risks will use financial instruments as tools to hedge their exposure to FX moves in a bid to lock in exchange rates for a set period. That can reduce volatility and increase cash flow confidence.
These tools include forward contracts, options and swaps.
Forward contracts
A forward contract is an agreement to buy or sell a particular currency at a specified price, on a future date up to 12 months in advance. A forward contract allows a business to lock in a specific exchange rate, which helps increase confidence in cash flow, pricing and costs. A key benefit of the forward contract is that its terms can be customized, which makes it one of the more popular hedging tools.
While forward contracts secure advantageous exchange rates in advance to shield businesses from market fluctuations, they do come with the risk that the exchange rate might shift in favor of the business, in which case the currency must still be purchased at the agreed-upon rate.
Options contracts
An options contract gives the buyer the right, but not the obligation, to buy or sell a particular currency at a specified price before or by a certain expiration date. Options provide businesses with more flexibility than a forward contract, because they allow a business to hedge against unfavorable currency shifts while also providing the opportunity to take advantage of favorable moves in the exchange rate.
Options are useful in particularly volatile markets, where a business may want some level of security without committing to a transaction. Options contracts can be structured in several ways to offer more, or less, room to take advantage of favorable currency moves. However, to gain this flexibility the business must pay a premium to enter into the contract.
It’s also important to recognize that if the market moves against the initial investment and forecast, the downside protection may disappear entirely, which could lead to large losses. And the value of an option contract decreases as the expiration date approaches, which can also lead to losses or diminished gains.
Businesses should ensure they fully understand the terms of the contract they are purchasing along with its implied volatility, time decay and other factors before making these commitments.
Swap agreements
Some companies use currency swaps, in which two parties enter a financial agreement to exchange specific amounts of one currency for another at an agreed exchange rate and then reverse the swap after a predetermined period.
This financial agreement takes place between two parties to exchange assets that have cash flows for a set period of time. At the time the contract is initiated, the value of at least one of the assets being swapped is determined by a random or uncertain variable, such as an interest rate or a commodity price.
These types of financial instruments are complicated and require a high degree of understanding and strategy, and they are not always available to all parties in all jurisdictions.
Market orders
A market order is an instruction to buy or sell a particular currency when the exchange rate reaches a specified price. Currency markets operate 24/7, and most businesses aren’t resourced to monitor their movements around the clock. Businesses use this strategy to capture a desired exchange rate and engage in payments when that desired level is reached.
Market orders are predominately used when the execution price is more important than the immediacy of the trade.
Natural hedging
Natural hedging is defined as balancing assets to offset risk from currency fluctuations. This approach helps mitigate currency risk by aligning cash flows and expenses in the same currency. A common method to achieve this is holding balances, which allow a business to maintain funds in different currencies. The business then manages FX risk by reducing the need for currency conversions, which organically reduces exposure internally without relying on external financial instruments.
Most frequently encountered foreign exchange risk pitfalls
Many businesses fall into common pitfalls when it comes to navigating FX risk. From high costs and operational challenges to unforeseen political and market volatility, understanding these risks and how to avoid them is key to meeting your financial objectives.
FX risk pitfall #1: High fees and complete loss in hedging
While many businesses will use some derivatives, including futures contracts and options agreements, locking in rates and strike prices can have downsides. The first is costs. There are transaction costs and fees for the forward contracts and swaps as well as options premiums.
Then, no investment is guaranteed to make money, and these trades can generate huge losses. Sophisticated traders and investors know FX markets are highly volatile and can make whipsaw moves that wipe out smaller positions. This type of result may end up costing the business dearly.
There are other associated risks, such as getting stuck in forward contracts that cannot be terminated by a single party. So, companies can end up in a longer-term contract when they no longer need a hedge against a certain currency.
FX risk pitfall #2: Operational burden
Currency hedging can be an expensive endeavor. Many enterprises can afford to invest into experts to carry out risk management strategies and investment professionals to implement them, but there is also the added administrative time, effort and costs associated with monitoring and carrying them out.
Smaller companies may think they can’t commit the necessary resources or capital to successfully hedge FX exposure. Hint: This pitfall might be the easiest to avoid — with help from specialists at Convera.
FX risk pitfall #3: Headline risks
These are associated with politics, wars and economic data releases or central bank decisions that often trigger volatile moves, when traders tend to sell first and ask questions later. In times of turbulence, there’s also a counter-party risk — financial institutions or those on the other side of the trade can blow up and default.
FX risk pitfall #4: Currency gains
There is also opportunity cost whereby a business locking in exchange rates may miss out on even more favorable moves in a given direction after the hedge is in place. These positive shifts can’t be captured.
How to avoid these — and other — pitfalls?
Managing foreign exchange risk
While international trade and expanding and operating abroad can be risky, they can also be rewarding. That’s why risk management strategies often focus on identifying potential pitfalls such as currency fluctuations and seek to reduce or hedge exposure to losses from them.
It’s important to track currency moves, but experts such as Chris Braun, Head of Foreign Exchange at US Bank, advise to focus on reducing risk.
Braun cites a five-year study of more than 6,000 companies from 47 countries that found that FX hedging was associated with lower volatility in cash flows and returns, lower systematic risk and higher market values (Bartram, Brown, and Conrad). Another study focused on US companies found FX hedging raised market valuation by almost 5%.
Economists suggest companies of all sizes regularly consult with foreign exchange risk experts, given the complexity of regulations that vary from market to market, the difficulty in managing multiple currencies since they don’t move in unison and the various other differences that come into play for firms engaged in international trade.
Customize FX risk management
Many small companies are prepared to accept currency fluctuation as a cost of doing international business, or they believe only large companies have the strength to engage in currency risk management. The reality is that with some proactive planning — and specialist advice — a business of any size can ride the ebbs and flows of volatility into international growth.
A proactive FX risk management policy is essential for companies that engage in international trade and must reflect the unique risks pertinent to the business’s operations. This includes the extent of risk the business is willing to take and defining the right hedging tools to meet the company’s objectives.
Specialists like Convera offer the expertise required to develop a tailored risk management policy to help a business respond to the complexities of the currency market. Through regular monitoring and reporting, Convera can help businesses stay updated on market developments and adapt their strategies effectively in response to currency fluctuations.

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*Hedging products are derivative financial instruments which may expose you to risk should the underlying exposure you are hedging cease to exist. They may be suitable if you have a high level of understanding and accept the risks associated with derivative financial instruments that involve foreign exchange and related markets. If you are not confident about your understanding of derivative financial instruments, or foreign exchange and related markets, we strongly suggest you seek independent advice before making the decision to use these instruments.