Every company that buys or sells across borders faces a hidden cost. Currency moves. Prices shift. And the money you thought you'd make can disappear. The real problem isn't the exchange rate itself. It's how you manage the risk.

Most firms start by hedging each deal one by one. It feels safe. But it's slow and expensive. A better way exists. It's called a netting center. Think of it as a clearing house inside your own company.

Let's look at how exposure works, and how a netting center can transform your treasury.

Types of Foreign Exchange Exposure

Not all currency risk is the same. You face three distinct types. Knowing the difference helps you pick the right defense.

Table 1: Three Types of FX Exposure
Exposure TypeWhat It MeasuresTime HorizonExample
Transaction ExposureCash flow impact from existing contractsShort-term (days to months)An invoice in EUR payable in 60 days
Translation ExposureBalance sheet impact from consolidating foreign subsidiariesQuarterly / AnnualConverting a UK subsidiary's GBP assets to USD for group reporting
Economic ExposureLong-term impact on firm value from unexpected rate shiftsLong-term (years)A stronger home currency making exports permanently less competitive

Transaction exposure hits your wallet directly. Translation exposure changes your reported numbers. Economic exposure changes your whole business model.

A US company sells machine parts to a German buyer. The invoice is for €500,000, due in 90 days. Today, €1 = $1.10. That's $550,000 expected. If the euro drops to $1.05, the firm gets only $525,000. That sudden $25,000 loss is transaction exposure biting hard.

Key-Points
Exposure Is Not Just About Contracts

Transaction exposure is the most visible, but economic exposure can destroy long-term value. A netting center primarily tackles transaction exposure.

What Is a Netting Center and Why Build One

A netting center is a single entity inside your corporate group. It settles intercompany invoices in multiple currencies. Instead of ten subsidiaries pay each other, they all pay the center, and the center pays them.

This turns a messy web into a simple star. The center nets off opposite flows. It only hedges the leftover net exposure.

Table 2: Before vs. After Netting Center
MetricWithout NettingWith Netting Center
Monthly Cross-Border Payments12020
Banks Used82
Total Transaction Fees$45,000$9,000
FX Spread Cost0.8% on gross flow0.8% on net flow only
Hedging Contracts Needed405

The numbers speak clearly. An 80% reduction in fees is common. But the real magic is in visibility. You finally see your total FX position in one place.

Imagine a group with a UK subsidiary owed €2 million by the French unit. The French unit is owed €1.5 million by the UK unit. Without netting, they'd each hedge their own side. Two contracts. Two spreads. With a netting center, the net position is just €500,000. One hedge. Half the cost.

Design Choices for Your Netting Center

Where you put the center matters. The legal structure matters even more. You need a setup that is tax-efficient, legally robust, and operationally simple.

Table 3: Netting Center Location and Structure Options
Design ElementOption AOption BBest For
LocationFinancial hub (Netherlands, Singapore)Same country as parentOption A if you prioritize banking access; Option B if you prioritize legal simplicity
Legal EntitySeparate treasury companyDivision of existing subsidiaryOption A for large, complex groups; Option B for smaller setups
Currency ScopeAll major and minor currenciesTop 5 trading currencies onlyStart with Option B, expand to Option A
SystemDedicated TMS (Treasury Management System)ERP moduleOption A if daily volume exceeds 50 trades

Don't overcomplicate day one. Start with your top five currencies. Use a simple legal entity in a stable jurisdiction. Add complexity only when the savings justify it.

A mid-sized manufacturer put its netting center in Belgium. Why? Good double-taxation treaties. Stable regulation. And a banking sector that understands corporate treasury. The legal setup took three months. The payoff came in month four, when they cut bank fees by 70%.

Key-Points
Start Simple, Scale Smart

You don't need the perfect design on day one. Pick a safe jurisdiction. Net your top currencies first. Add more later.

Running the Center: Daily Operations

A netting center is not a "set and forget" tool. It needs a daily rhythm. Subsidiaries report their positions. The center nets them. Residual exposures get hedged.

Table 4: Daily Netting Center Workflow
TimeActionOwnerCritical Rule
09:00 AMSubsidiaries submit expected cash flows for next 30 daysLocal finance teamsDeadline is strict; late submissions get excluded
10:00 AMSystem calculates net position per currency pairAutomated (TMS)No manual overrides without approval
11:00 AMTreasury reviews net exposure and decides hedging ratio (90%? 100%?)Group TreasurerPolicy must define this ratio in advance
12:00 PMExecute hedges for residual net positionDealing desk or bankOnly hedge what the system calculates
02:00 PMConfirm settlement instructions for next day's paymentsNetting center operatorDual verification mandatory

Discipline is everything. If one sub misses the deadline, the whole netting picture gets distorted. You must enforce rules without exception.

One company had a subsidiary that constantly submitted late. The treasurer warned them twice. Then he simply excluded them from the netting cycle for a week. The sub paid full spread and bank fees for five days. They never missed a deadline again.

Risk Controls Inside the Netting Center

A netting center concentrates risk before it reduces it. That's the paradox. You need strong controls. Otherwise, you create a single point of failure.

Credit risk is top concern. If a subsidiary can't pay the center, the hedge still stands. You could face a double loss.

Table 5: Key Risk Controls for Netting Centers
Risk TypeControl MechanismMonitoring Frequency
Credit RiskSet internal credit limits per subsidiary; require cash collateral if exceededDaily
Operational RiskDual-approval for all payments above $100k; backup system tested monthlyPer transaction
Market RiskHedge ratio policy (e.g., hedge 80% of net exposure); stop-loss limits on open positionsReal-time alerts
Legal RiskStandard intercompany netting agreement reviewed annually by local counselAnnual
Key-Points
Concentration Creates New Risks

You reduce transaction costs but create a central point where all flows converge. Protect it with credit limits, dual controls, and clear hedge policies.

Technology and Data: The Backbone

You can't run a netting center on spreadsheets. You need clean data flowing in. And a system that calculates net positions fast.

The most common mistake is underestimating the data cleanup phase. Garbage in means wrong hedges out.

A global retailer spent six months just standardizing how its 25 subsidiaries coded intercompany invoices. They created a simple chart of accounts specific to the netting center. That was boring work. But it made the go-live flawless. No disputes. No missing entries.

Key Takeaways

Table 6: Key Takeaways
Key PointWhat It MeansAction Item
Netting cuts transaction costs by up to 80%You only pay spread on the net, not the gross flowMap your intercompany flows now; estimate net vs. gross
Three exposure types exist; netting handles transaction exposure bestTranslation and economic exposure need separate toolsClassify your exposures by type before designing the center
Location matters for tax and legal easeFinancial hubs offer better banking but may add complexityEvaluate at least two jurisdictions before deciding
Daily discipline is non-negotiableLate submissions break the whole netting cycleSet strict deadlines and enforce penalties for late reporting
Concentration creates new risksCredit, operational, and legal risks all intensify at the centerImplement credit limits, dual controls, and annual legal reviews
Data quality defines successClean intercompany data enables fast, accurate nettingStandardize invoice coding across all subsidiaries before go-live