By Caroline Valetkevitch
NEW YORK, April 11 (Reuters) - Exchange rate fluctuations in
the last quarter of 2015 had the largest negative impact in
almost five years on North American companies' financial
results, as global currencies weakened against the dollar,
FIREapps said in a report on Monday.
The companies that quantified an exchange-rate effect
reported a negative impact totaling $33.94 billion, the most for
any quarter since the first quarter of 2011, when the currency
risk consulting firm began analyzing the data.
That's 76 percent higher than the total impact in the third
quarter of 2015.
The foreign currency earnings of U.S. multinational
companies are worth less in dollars when the dollar is stronger.
Also, the robust currency makes U.S. goods and services more
expensive overseas.
The number of North American companies citing a negative
impact from currency fluctuations was 357 in the fourth quarter,
also the largest number of any quarter since the firm began
analyzing data in 2011.
Of those companies, 47 reported the impact of exchange rates
on their earnings per share, with an average negative effect of
7 cents a share, lower than the 12 cents a share average for the
third quarter, the FIREapps data showed.
The report includes reviews of 850 multinational companies
in the United States, Mexico and Canada with at least 15 percent
international revenues in at least two currencies.
The currency cited most often by the companies in the
report, in their fourth-quarter earnings calls, was the euro,
with 79 mentions, the report showed. The Canadian dollar was
next, with 37 mentions.
U.S. S&P 500 companies derive roughly half of all their
sales overseas, and they derive less than 10 percent of their
sales from Europe, according to S&P Dow Jones Indices data.
The U.S. dollar was up 2.8 percent against the euro EUR=
in the fourth quarter, while the U.S. dollar was up 3.9 percent
against the Canadian dollar CAD= in that period.