A single quarter can tell the whole story. Your European supplier sends an invoice for €100,000. Three months ago, that meant $110,000. Today? Try $105,000. Sounds great—except you're the one selling to Europe and watching your dollar revenue shrink with every exchange rate tick. Currency swings don't care about your profit targets.
Here's what actually works when protecting your business from exchange rate chaos.
Foreign exchange risk shows up whenever your money crosses borders. You've got exposure the moment you sign a contract in euros, report earnings from your Mexican subsidiary, or compete with imports priced in yen.
Three different flavors will hit you:
Transaction exposure — the immediate, concrete risk. You've agreed to pay ¥10 million in 60 days for manufacturing equipment. Right now, at 148 yen per dollar, you're looking at $67,568. But what if the yen strengthens to 138 by payment day? Same equipment now costs $72,464. That's five grand evaporating because you waited.
Translation exposure — the accounting headache. Your UK subsidiary posts strong numbers: £2 million profit. Great news, until you consolidate financials. Sterling dropped 7% this quarter, so that £2 million converts to fewer dollars on your income statement. Wall Street sees declining earnings even though your British team crushed their targets.
Economic exposure — the sneaky one that compounds over time. You manufacture furniture in North Carolina. Vietnamese facto...