The Group’s policy is to protect the Group from currency fluctuations together with maintaining the integrity of business decisions and protecting the competitive position of the Group’s activities. The Group’s primary currency exposures are in US Dollars and arise from sales or purchases by an operating unit in currencies other than the unit’s functional currency.
The Group requires all of its operating units to hedge foreign exchange exposures for firm commitments relating to sales or purchases or when highly probable forecast transactions have been identified. Before hedging, the operating units are also required to take into account their competitive position. Operating units are not permitted to speculate on future currency movements.
The Group aims to hedge approximately 70 per cent to 100 per cent (up to 24 months) of its foreign currency purchases for which firm commitments or highly probable forecast transactions exist. Such foreign currency purchases arise predominantly in the retail, Chemicals, Energy and Fertilisers and Industrial and Safety divisions.
The parent company transacts all hedges of currency sales and purchases on a back-to-back basis with forward currency contracts with banks and these are exactly offset by internal contracts with the relevant subsidiaries. From a Group perspective, the internal contracts are eliminated as part of the consolidation process, leaving only the external contracts in the name of Wesfarmers Limited.
The parent has EUR debt which is converted to Australian dollars using cross currency interest rate swaps.
As a result of operations in New Zealand, the Group’s balance sheet can be affected by movements in the AUD/NZD exchange rate. The Group mitigates the effect of its structural currency exposure by borrowing in NZD in New Zealand.