Statoil, the national company in Norway, is a large, sophisticated, and active participant in both the currency and petrochemical markets. Although it is a Norwegian company, because it operates within the global oil market, it considers the U.S. dollar ($), rather than the Norwegian krone (Nok), as its functional currency. Ari Karlsen is a currency trading strategist for Statoil. In a daily meeting, the Chief Financial Officer (CFO) gave Ari the following table of market rates: Spot exchange rate: Yen 106/$ U.S. dollar interest rate: per annum 10% Japanese Yen interest rate: per annum 6% and told Ari that the company’s financial analyst expected the Japanese Yen to depreciate against the U.S. dollar by 3.46% in 90 days. Assume there are 360 days in a year, and all interest rates are simple interest rates. If the financial analyst’s prediction about the US dollar and Japanese Yen turned out to be true: What would the spot exchange rate (Yen/$) be in 90 days?
Statoil, the national company in Norway, is a large, sophisticated, and active participant in both the currency and petrochemical markets. Although it is a Norwegian company, because it operates within the global oil market, it considers the U.S. dollar ($), rather than the Norwegian krone (Nok), as its functional currency. Ari Karlsen is a currency trading strategist for Statoil.
In a daily meeting, the Chief Financial Officer (CFO) gave Ari the following table of market rates:
Spot exchange rate: Yen 106/$
U.S. dollar interest rate: per annum 10%
Japanese Yen interest rate: per annum 6%
and told Ari that the company’s financial analyst expected the Japanese Yen to depreciate against the U.S. dollar by 3.46% in 90 days. Assume there are 360 days in a year, and all interest rates are simple interest rates. If the financial analyst’s prediction about the US dollar and Japanese Yen turned out to be true:
What would the spot exchange rate (Yen/$) be in 90 days?
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