Exchange Rates Deal $22.56 Billion Blow to Companies' Earnings
October 17 2019 - 5:39PM
Dow Jones News
By Nina Trentmann
Uncertainty around tariff tensions, Britain's exit from the
European Union and the state of the global economy is expected to
drive foreign currency-related losses at North American and
European companies in the coming months, following a $22.56 billion
blow to balance sheets in the second quarter, according to a
company that tracks exchange-rate effects.
The British pound has fluctuated in recent days amid news around
U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson's Brexit deal, while the U.S.
dollar remains near a multiyear high and regional currencies, such
as the Turkish lira, have traded lower.
"Companies will need to improve their currency risk management
strategies," said Wolfgang Koester, a senior strategy officer at
Kyriba Corp., a treasury software provider that tracks currency
effects on companies' earnings. "Otherwise, they will keep having
losses in this volatile environment."
Companies including Honeywell International Inc., Johnson &
Johnson, Abbott Laboratories and Philip Morris International Inc.
in recent days highlighted the negative impact of currency effects
on their third-quarter earnings.
Abbott Laboratories, a manufacturer of health-care products,
reported a 4% hit on sales from foreign exchange rates in key
emerging markets such as India, Brazil, Russia and China. Johnson
& Johnson, meanwhile, reported sales in markets outside the
U.S. were 2.8% lower because of currency effects.
Philip Morris's net revenue was reduced by $115 million because
of currency effects in the third quarter, resulting in a
foreign-exchange impact of $931 million since the beginning of the
year. "Currency is something that is very hard to predict," Chief
Financial Officer Martin King said in an interview Thursday. The
company hedges against movements in some currencies, including the
Japanese yen, he said.
During the second quarter, North American companies listed on
the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq recorded currency-related
losses of $21.01 billion, down from $23.39 billion in the first
quarter, according to Kyriba. Exchange rate-related losses at these
companies have exceeded $20 billion for three consecutive
quarters.
European companies listed on the FTSE 100 and Euronext reported
a decline in foreign-exchange effects to $1.55 billion in the
second quarter, down from $3.31 billion in the first quarter of
2019, Kyriba said.
Write to Nina Trentmann at Nina.Trentmann@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
October 17, 2019 17:24 ET (21:24 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2019 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
Honeywell (NASDAQ:HON)
Historical Stock Chart
From Feb 2025 to Mar 2025
Honeywell (NASDAQ:HON)
Historical Stock Chart
From Mar 2024 to Mar 2025