Romanian companies are now engaging in corporate cost-cutting, reduce expenditure or hedge currency exposure, in the wake of financial crisis. Cosmin Bucur, vicepresident of corporate sales and director global markets at RBS Romania, said in an interview to Wall-Street, that although the companies are trying to hedge away the effects of wide currency fluctuations, the volumes traded for EUR/RON currency pair dropped by as much as 30% this year.
Financial crisis brought new challenges to clients
There are companies, such as direct importers or energy companies, whose turnover is up to 90% linked to exchange rates, and currency risk hedging can make a major difference in their annual reports.
If in 2008, the companies were seeing currency risk as a natural loss that didn’t require any active management, as it was offset by the extremely aggressive increase in business or business segments, the situation changed radically this year, in the midst of a completely new macroeconomic climate.
The companies started to express interest in currency risk hedging, largely due to high volatility and wider currency fluctuations.
“As a result, we tried to streamline the activity with the bank, by enabling clients to access the electronic currency trading platform as well as to reduce or to eliminate the currency risk that affects the company’s turnover”, said the representative of RBS Romania.
The size of currency transaction carried by companies on EUR/RON pair reflects how sound the business environment or volume of companies are, Bucur continued.
RBS director says the volumes of currency transactions with EUR/RON pair had dropped by 20-30% , especially from the perspective of inter-bank currency market, as it tends to absorb the volumes generated by the companies via purchase/sale of foreign currency both commercial exchanges and specul