Abstract:
Indian economy in the post-liberalisation era has witnessed increasing awareness of the need
for introduction of various risk management products to enable hedging against market risk
in a cost effective way. This industry-wide, cross-sectional study concentrates on recent
foreign exchange risk management practices and derivatives product usage by large nonbanking
Indian-based firms. The study is exploratory in nature and aims at an understanding
the risk appetite and FERM (Foreign Exchange Risk Management) practices of Indian
corporate enterprises. This study focuses on the activity of end-users of financial derivatives
and is confined to 501 non-banking corporate enterprises. A combination of simple random
and judgement sampling was used for selecting the corporate enterprises and the major
statistical tools used were Correlation and Factor analysis. The factor analysis finds that there
are three derived factors of non-usage of derivative products namely, Perceptual Issues,
Technical & policy factor and Pricing & Cost considerations. Further, the correlation
analysis reveals positive relation between the nine variables representing the reasons as nonusage
of derivatives by Indian corporates. The study finds wide usage of derivative products
for risk management and the prime reason of hedging is reduction in volatility of cash flows.
VAR (Value-at-Risk) technique was found to be the preferred method of risk evaluation by
maximum number of Indian corporate. Further, in terms of the external techniques for risk
hedging, the preference is mostly in favour of forward contracts, followed by swaps and
cross-currency options This article throws light on various concerns of Indian firms
regarding derivative usage and reasons for non-usage, apart form techniques of risk hedging,
risk evaluation methods adopted, risk management policy and types of derivatives used.