Cash FlowIntermediate📖 7 min read

Effect of Exchange Rate Changes

Impact of Currency Fluctuations on Reported Cash Balances

Location
Bottom of Cash Flow Statement
Nature
Non-cash translation adjustment
Impact
Reported cash only (not actual flows)
Direction
Strong home currency → negative effect
Reconciliation Role
Bridges CFS change to balance sheet change

Effect of Exchange Rate Changes (also called Foreign Currency Translation Effect on Cash) is the adjustment in the cash flow statement that captures how changes in foreign exchange rates affect the reported value of cash and cash equivalents held in non-domestic currencies. It explains the difference between the operational change in cash and the actual movement in the balance sheet cash balance due purely to FX rate movements.

Table of Contents

Why This Line Exists

When a company holds cash in foreign currencies (euros, yen, pounds, etc.), the dollar value of that cash changes as exchange rates move—even if no money actually flows in or out.

The cash flow statement focuses on actual transactions (operating, investing, financing), so FX effects are shown separately at the bottom to reconcile the operational cash change with the total change in reported cash.

A Clear Example

Your company starts the year with €10 million in a European bank account.

  • Jan 1 exchange rate: €1 = $1.20 → $12M equivalent
  • No deposits/withdrawals during year
  • Dec 31 rate: €1 = $1.10 → now worth $11M
  • Effect of Exchange Rate Changes: -$1 million

Your cash flow statement shows $0 from operations/investing/financing for this cash, but balance sheet cash drops $1M purely from weaker euro.

The line captures that non-cash translation loss.

How It's Calculated

  • Translate beginning foreign cash at beginning rate
  • Translate ending foreign cash at ending rate
  • Difference = Effect of Exchange Rate Changes
  • Or: Change in foreign cash (local currency) translated at average rate, adjusted for rate movement

Stronger reporting currency (e.g., USD) → negative effect on foreign cash value.

Where It Shows Up

At the bottom of the cash flow statement:

  • Net cash from operating/investing/financing
  • +/- Effect of exchange rate changes on cash
  • = Net increase/decrease in cash
  • + Beginning cash
  • = Ending cash

Also in cash reconciliation footnote.

Real-World Patterns

  • Strong USD periods → large negative effects for US companies
  • Weak USD → positive boost to reported cash
  • Multinationals with big overseas cash (Apple, Microsoft) show billions in FX effects
  • Eurozone or emerging market exposure amplifies swings

What It Tells You

  • Scale of foreign cash holdings
  • Currency risk in liquidity
  • Non-operating influence on reported cash
  • True operational cash generation (add back for analysis)
  • Potential repatriation tax considerations
⚠️

Persistent negative effects from strong home currency can mask strong underlying cash flow.

Key Takeaways

1

Captures translation impact of FX rates on foreign cash balances.

2

Non-cash item—reconciles operational cash change to balance sheet.

3

Strong reporting currency → negative effect.

4

Size reflects overseas cash exposure.

5

Add back to assess true cash generation.

6

Watch trends for currency risk in liquidity.

Related Terms

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