International Flow of Funds - Blades PLC Case Study Ben Holt‚ the finance director of Blades plc‚ has decided to counteract the decreasing demand for “Speedos” roller blades by exporting this product to Thailand. Furthermore‚ due to the low cost of rubber and plastic in Southeast Asia‚ Holt has decided to import some of the components needed to manufacture “Speedos” from Thailand. Holt feels that importing rubber and plastic components from Thailand will provide Blades with a cost advantage (the components
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Case Study BLADE INC. CASE Submitted to Riyashad Ahmed(RyA) FIN-444 Sec-3 Submitted by Antu Biswas 102 0044 030 BLADE INC. CASE 1. What are the advantages Blades could gain from importing from and/or exporting to a foreign country such as Thailand? Ans: The advantages Blades could gain from importing from and/or exporting to Thailand could be Decrease their cost of goods sold‚ and increase Blades’ net income since rubber and plastic are cheaper when imported from a foreign country
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BLADES‚ INC. CASE Assessment of Future Exchange Rate Movements As the chief financial officer of Blades‚ Inc.‚ Ben Holt is pleased that his current system of exporting “Speedos” to Thailand seems to be working well. Blades’ primary customer in Thailand‚ a retailer called Entertainment Products‚ has committed itself to purchasing a fixed number of Speedos annually for the next 3 years at a fixed price denominated in baht‚ Thailand’s currency. Furthermore‚ Blades is using a Thai supplier for some
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Overview Blades‚ Inc.‚ is a USA based company that has been in corporate in the United States for three years. Blade relatively is a small Company‚ with total assets of only $200 million. The company produces only a single type of roller blade. Ben Holt the CFO of the Blades Inc. Financial Information Total assets of was only $200 million and first year net income of $3.5 million. Return on asset is 7%. It stock price has fallen from high of $20 per share three years ago to $12
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Question No.1: One point of concern for you is that there is a trade of between higher interest rates in Thailand and delayed conversion of baht in to dollars‚ explain what does that mean? Answer: The term trade off here refers to the concept explained by Miller in his theory trade off theory of capital. The crux of the theory is that you got two options and you have to select the best one out of that. Here the two available options are i) The revenues denominated in are converted
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James D’Elia FN 316 International Financial Management Professor Dunbar Case #3 Blades Inc. Chapter 5 1) If Blades used call options to hedge its Yen in payables‚ they are presented with 2 options. They can hedge at a lower exercise price (.00756) with a higher premium (2%); of they can hedge at a higher exercise price (.00792) with a lower premium (1.5%). Traditionally‚ the premiums are normally 1.5%‚ however due to recent uncertainty they have risen. This presents a tradeoff between an exercise
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TABLE OF CONTENT ACKNOWLEDGMENT 3 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 4 LIST OF TABLES 5 LIST OF FIGURES 6 1.0 CHAPTER ONE: INTRODUCTION 7 1.1 BACKGROUND OF MALAYSIA 7 1.2 BACKGROUND OF THE COMPANY 9 1.3 PROBLEM STATEMENT 11 1.4 RESEARCH OBJECTIVES 11 1.5 SIGNIFICANCE OF THE STUDY 11 2.0 RESEARCH METHODOLOGY 12 2.1 DATA COLLECTION METHOD 12 3.0 CHAPTER THREE: LITERATURE REVIEW 13 4.0 CHAPTER FOUR: FINDINGS 15 4.1 INTERNAL ANALYSIS 15 4.1.1 STRENGTH 15 4.1.2 WEAKNESS 15
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Case Problem: Blades‚ Inc. 1. One point of concern for you is that there is a tradeoff between the higher interest rates in Thailand and the delayed conversion of baht into dollars. Explain what this means. ANSWER: If the net baht-denominated cash flows are converted into dollars today‚ Blades is not subject to any future depreciation of the baht that would result in less dollar cash flows. 2. If the net baht received from the Thailand operation are invested in Thailand‚ how will
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Thailand is a country located at the center of the Indochina peninsula in Southeast Asia. CAPITAL: Bangkok Population: 67.091.089 people. Area: 513.115 km². Thailand is a country located at the centre of the Indochina peninsula in Southeast Asia. It is bordered: North by Burma and Laos‚ East by Laos and Cambodia‚ South by the Gulf of Thailand and Malaysia‚ West by the Andaman Sea and the southern extremity of Burma. [1] Thailand is the world’s 51st-largest country by total area. It
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THAILA ND Special Topic in Managerial Economics Outline • Thailand in Brief • Analysis Frameworks • • • • – SWOT Analysis – PEST Analysis Exclusive Interview: Thailand vs. Vietnam Investment Climate Business Implications Conclusion PART 1) THAILAND IN BRIEF THAILAND IN BRIEF • • • • • GDP Size (USD billions) 365.6 GDP PPP (% of world) = 0.78 GDP Per Capita (USD) = 5‚678 Population (millions) = 69.5 Setting: the center of the Indochina peninsula‚ Southeast Asia Comparing Thailand’s GDP
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