What makes investors over or underweight?
explaining international appetites for foreign equities
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Author
Contributions
- Kole, Linda Sue. - Contributor
Publication
2004 - Federal Reserve Board, Washington, D.C, District of Columbia
Language
English
Word Count
0 words, Guess
Page Count
0 pages
Physical Format
Electronic resource
Identifiers
- Library of Congress Control Number2004620095
- Open LibraryOL3390419M
Classifications
- LCCHG3879
Description
"Using data from the IMF Coordinated Portfolio Investment Surveys conducted in 2001, we analyze the determinants of 31 countries' international equity holdings. We show that investors in all countries underweight U.S. equities in their portfolios, many by more than they underweight foreign equities in general. Such behavior is surprising given the common perception of the United States as a desirable investment destination due to its well-developed legal and regulatory environment. Instead we find that investors in some countries are overweight in equities from other countries with which they have close regional or political ties. Such ties, along with distance, trade, issuance of U.S. ADRs or cross-listing on the London Stock exchange, market concentration, and estimated betas, help explain patterns of diversification. However, even when all these variables are included, we find significant fixed effects for most countries, suggesting that a considerable amount of cross-country variation in investment positions and in home bias remains to be explained. Our work confirms previous findings and extends results most completely documented for the United States to other major investor countries. But it also suggests caution should be used when interpreting results derived from studies of one or a few countries"--Federal Reserve Board web site.
Subjects
Series Statement
- International finance discussion papers ;
- no. 819
- International finance discussion papers (Online) ;
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