Don’t be affraid of credit changes
Through openness and a future orientation an organization can begin to take a realistic look at its culture. By doing this self-analysis, it begins the process of healing the wounds caused by a past orientation. The bad news is that the journey toward openness and a more positive paradigm takes time. The good news is that you can start right now. And you don’t have to go through the experience alone. You can use the Partnership Continuum as a guide to increase your Partnering Intelligence and get you to your destination.
Change is part of our daily lives. Our bodies go through a normal growth and maturity cycle as we change from children to adolescents and then to adults. As our bodies develop, we also mature both mentally and emotionally. Change doesn’t end with our bodies and minds. It is a dynamic that affects our relationships as well. And to add to the complexity, people are changing in different ways and at different rates all the time. As Heraclitus noted, there is nothing permanent except change. With all this change occurring around us, it’s helpful to remember that while you can’t always control change, you can control how you respond to it.
Credit exposure to foreign currencies
European telecom companies have their operations primarily in Europe. Therefore, exposure to foreign currencies is very limited with the exception of Telefonica’s exposure to Latin America and Deutsche Telekom’s US subsidiaries. While in other industries an appreciating Euro increases competition, it appears that this effect should be negligible for the established European telecom services companies. The barriers of entry seem to be high enough to guarantee broadly stable market shares in the coming years. Since many of the telecom companies have a material fraction of their debt in US dollars, they would benefit from a strengthening Euro.
It is in the nature of financial institutions to have exposure to a variety of currencies. Exchange rate risk is therefore translational rather than transactional. By and large, long-term currency risk is primarily taken in the form of subsidiaries. Currency fluctuations change the value of the equity invested, hence are reflected in the balance sheet rather than in the P&L. Of the larger European banking groups, ABN Amro, BNP Paribas and Royal Bank of Scotland have substantial retail banking operations in the United States. In the insurance sector, Aegon, AXA, ING Verzekeringen and Prudential stand out in terms of US exposure.