5331.0 - Balance of Payments and International Investment Position, Australia, Concepts, Sources and Methods, 1998  
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Contents >> Chapter 13. Portfolio investment >> Concept and definition

13.1. Portfolio investment consists of international equity and debt securities not classified to either direct investment or reserve assets

13.2. The financial transactions and the overall levels of Australia’s portfolio investment assets and liabilities are illustrated in table 13.1. The following features are demonstrated in the table:

      • since Australia relies on overseas funds to finance its current account deficit, Australia’s portfolio liabilities are traditionally much greater than portfolio assets;
      • equity securities make the greatest contribution to Australia’s portfolio investment assets;
      • debt securities make up the largest part of Australia’s portfolio investment liabilities and, within this component, the largest contributor is bonds and notes (i.e. long-term securities);
      • in 1996-97, Australia’s holdings of financial derivatives abroad, on account of transactions, fell by over $900 million. However, in terms of the level at the end of the period, the assets and liabilities for financial derivatives were largely offsetting.
13.1 PORTFOLIO INVESTMENT TRANSACTIONS AND LEVELS, 1996-97
Financial transactions
Position at end of period


Assets
Liabilities
Assets
Liabilities
($m)
($m)
($m)
($m)

Portfolio investment
-3,548
16,927
-69,441
295,816
Equity securities
-4,278
2,601
-47,980
86,323
Debt securities
730
14,326
-21,460
209,494
Bonds and notes
-426
12,905
-8,907
160,538
Money market instruments
214
273
-3,288
38,735
Financial derivatives
942
1,148
-9,266
10,220

Source: Tables 26, 32 and 33 from Balance of Payments and International Investment Position, Australia, March quarter 1998 (Cat. no. 5302.0).

13.3. Portfolio investment in equity capital is more passive or speculative in nature than direct investment in equity capital because the portfolio investor has virtually no ability to influence either the managerial decision-making for the enterprise in which investment takes place or the return on that investment. Transactions in this instrument include take-up of new issues as well as purchases and sales of existing securities on secondary markets. Transactions may take place on organised markets (such as stock exchanges) or, on occasion, off-market (bypassing the stock exchange), and they may take place in Australia or abroad.

13.4. Debt securities include tradable instruments such as bonds, debentures and notes (long-term instruments) (1) and money market instruments (short-term instruments (2)). Also included in portfolio debt securities, following international recommendations, are financial derivatives. These have a market value and are therefore financial instruments; most are traded or considered tradable because they can be offset in organised markets. Examples of derivatives are options, futures, warrants and currency and interest rate swaps. The major types of derivatives are described in box 13.2.
1. In the Survey of International Investment, long-term debt instruments are defined as securities with an original contract of more than one year. They include: non-participating preference shares; bonds such as treasury, zero coupon, stripped, deep discounted, bunny, currency linked (e.g. dual currency), equity-related (e.g. convertible bonds), Eurobonds, global, foreign (e.g. dragon, yankee, samurai, bulldog, matador); asset-backed securities such as mortgage backed bonds, collateralised mortgage obligations (CMO); bearer depository receipts (BDR); securities issued and lent or otherwise provided under sale/buy back arrangements where the recipient becomes the registered holder of those securities; index-linked securities e.g. property index certified; floating rate notes (FRN) such as perpetual rate notes (PRN), variable rate notes (VRN), structured FRN, reverse FRN, collared FRN, step up recovery FRN (SURF), range/corridor/accrual notes; Euro medium term notes (EMTN) with contractual maturity of more than one year; debentures; certificates of deposit with contractual maturity of more than one year; and any other long-term securities.

2. In the Survey of International Investment, short-term debt instruments are defined as short-term commercial and financial paper with an original contractual maturity of one year or less. They include: treasury notes; certificates of deposit with a contractual maturity of one year or less; short-term notes issued under note issuance facilities (NIF) and revolving underwriting facilities (RUF); convertible and non-convertible short-term securities; short-term promissory notes; bills of exchange; and any other short-term commercial and financial paper.

13.2
MAIN TYPES OF FINANCIAL DERIVATIVES
Recent international statistical standards recognise financial derivatives as financial instruments within the system of national accounts and balance of payments statistics. These are secondary instruments linked to, but separate from, a specific financial instrument or indicator, or commodity, and through which specific financial risk can be traded in its own right. They are used for a number of purposes including risk management, hedging, arbitrage between markets, and speculation. Derivatives may be included under the direct investment, portfolio investment or reserve assets categories. Some of the more common financial derivatives are described below.

Options and warrants

Options are contracts in which both the price and time for buying or selling are specified, and give the holder the right, but not an obligation, to buy (call options) or sell (put options) a particular financial instrument or commodity from or to another entity (the option writer). They can relate to equities, commodities, foreign currencies, interest rates, etc. Creating and exercising the option contracts, as well as secondary trading in options, all constitute transactions for balance of payments purposes where the holder and the writer are residents of different countries. Payment of the option price is treated in the balance of payments, under the financial derivatives component of portfolio debt securities, as an increase in financial assets of the buyer and an increase in financial liabilities of the seller. Theoretically, the option price consists of a financial asset and a service charge, and the latter component should be considered as a financial service. However, it is not possible to isolate the service component, and the full purchase price is recorded in the financial account. Corresponding treatments are accorded options in the international investment position statement, where the value recorded in the transactor’s books is used. Warrants are a form of option; they are usually written by an enterprise on its own shares, and are treated similarly to other options.

Futures

Futures are contracts between two parties to exchange, at a specified time and price, a real or financial asset for another financial asset. Such contracts can cover commodities, equities, currencies, interest rates and other financial instruments, and are all considered to be financial in character. Where the two parties are residents of different countries, tradable futures are recorded in both the balance of payments and international investment position in a manner similar to options.

Swaps

Swaps are contracts, usually relating to interest rates or currencies, between two entities who agree to exchange cash flows over time on a notional amount of principal. Interest rate swaps involve the exchange of cash flows related to interest rates that are different in nature, e.g. fixed and floating rates, two different floating rates. Cross currency interest rate swaps, sometimes known as currency swaps, involve the exchange of cash flows related to interest rates and an exchange of principal amounts at an agreed exchange rate at the end of the contract. There may also be an exchange of principal at the beginning of the contract with subsequent payments to amortise the principal over time in accordance with the swap contractual terms. While the BPM5 treatment was to include in the current account the net cash flows related to interest rate swaps, more recently agreement has been reached internationally to change the standard and record such net settlements under the financial derivatives component of the financial account in a similar manner to other derivatives. Where a swap has been undertaken to hedge a loan or other commitment, the underlying repayments of the principal of the primary investment are valued and classified to the financial account in accordance with the relevant debt instrument, and not at the hedged rate in the derivative.

Forward rate agreements

Forward rate agreements are arrangements associated with interest rates, in which two entities agree on a settlement cash flow based on the difference between an agreed interest rate and prevailing rates, at a future date, applied to a notional amount of principal. The settlement amount is recorded in the financial account at the time of settlement in a similar way to swaps (again this is different to the recommendation in BPM5, but is consistent with later international agreements on revisions to the standards). The international investment position will include the market value of the forward rate agreements in levels, price changes to that level over time, and the final settlement transaction.

Forward foreign exchange contracts

Forward foreign exchange contracts involve the exchange of funds in one currency for funds in another currency at a specified rate at a future date.

The values recorded for all financial derivatives do not include fees paid to financial intermediaries to establish or trade in them. Such fees are classified as financial services in the current account. Similarly, margin payments made between two entities as security against future obligations are recorded in the other liabilities component of other investment, rather than as financial derivatives.







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