Sources of Gains from International Portfolio Diversification

Sources of Gains from International Portfolio Diversification
Author: Nuno Fernandes
Publisher:
Total Pages: 46
Release: 2006
Genre:
ISBN:

This paper looks at the determinants of country and industry specific factors in international portfolio returns using a sample of forty eight countries and thirty nine industries over the last three decades. Country factors have remained relatively stable over the sample period while industry factors have significantly increased during the last decade and dropped again since 2000. The importance of industry and country factors is correlated with measures of economic and financial international integration and development. We find that financial market globalization is the main driving force behind the changes in relative magnitude of the different shocks. Country factors are smaller for countries integrated in world financial markets and have declined as the degree of financial integration and the number of countries pursuing financial liberalizations has increased. Higher international financial integration within an industry increases the importance of industry factors in explaining returns. Economic integration of production also helps in explaining returns. Countries with a more specialized production activity have higher country shocks.

Numeraire Portfolio Tests of the Size and Source of Gains from International Diversification

Numeraire Portfolio Tests of the Size and Source of Gains from International Diversification
Author: Ludger Hentschel
Publisher:
Total Pages: 38
Release: 2003
Genre:
ISBN:

We measure the size and sources of gains from international diversification using metrics that are independent of currency choices. When we apply these measures to industry sector portfolios for six large equity markets, we find that, offered costless access to a foreign market, investors would construct portfolios with substantial leverage to obtain large certainty-equivalent wealth gains from that market access. At the same time, modest proportional transaction costs would eliminate all of these gains by inducing investors to voluntarily forego positions in foreign assets. Using the same measures, we find that emerging market equity indices offer fewer gains from diversification than assets from developed markets.

Unexploited gains from international diversification : patterns of portfolio holdings around the world

Unexploited gains from international diversification : patterns of portfolio holdings around the world
Author: Tatiana Didier
Publisher:
Total Pages: 40
Release: 2010
Genre: Asset allocation
ISBN:

This paper studies how portfolios with a global investment scope are actually allocated internationally using a unique micro dataset on U.S. equity mutual funds. While mutual funds have great flexibility to invest globally, they invest in a surprisingly limited number of stocks, around 100. The number of holdings in stocks and countries from a given region declines as the investment scope of funds broadens. This restrictive investment practice has costs. A mean-variance strategy shows unexploited gains from further international diversification. Mutual funds investing globally could achieve better risk-adjusted returns by broadening their asset allocation, including stocks held by more specialized funds within the same mutual fund family (company). This investment pattern is not explained by lack of information or instruments, transaction costs, or a better ability of global funds to minimize negative outcomes. Instead, industry practices related to organizational factors seem to play an important role.

Multinationals and the Gains from International Diversification

Multinationals and the Gains from International Diversification
Author: Patrick F. Rowland
Publisher:
Total Pages: 61
Release: 2002
Genre:
ISBN:

One possible explanation for home bias is that investors may obtain indirect international diversification benefits by investing in multinational firms rather than by investing directly in foreign markets. This paper employs mean-variance spanning tests to examine the diversification potential of multinational firms and foreign market indices for investors domiciled in Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States. We find that in most countries and most time periods, the portfolio of domestic stocks spans the risk and return opportunities of a portfolio that includes domestic and multinational stocks. However, there is weak evidence that U.S. multinationals provided global diversification benefits in the full 1984-92 sample and in the post-1987 subsample. We also find that the addition of foreign market indices to a domestic portfolio - inclusive of multinationals - provides diversification benefits. The economic importance of the shift of the portfolio frontier - measured as the utility gain from diversification - varies considerably from market to market and often reflects the benefits of large short positions in certain markets.

Portfolio Diversification

Portfolio Diversification
Author: Francois-Serge Lhabitant
Publisher: Elsevier
Total Pages: 276
Release: 2017-09-26
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 0081017863

Portfolio Diversification provides an update on the practice of combining several risky investments in a portfolio with the goal of reducing the portfolio's overall risk. In this book, readers will find a comprehensive introduction and analysis of various dimensions of portfolio diversification (assets, maturities, industries, countries, etc.), along with time diversification strategies (long term vs. short term diversification) and diversification using other risk measures than variance. Several tools to quantify and implement optimal diversification are discussed and illustrated. - Focuses on portfolio diversification across all its dimensions - Includes recent empirical material that was created and developed specifically for this book - Provides several tools to quantify and implement optimal diversification

Resolution of Failed Banks by Deposit Insurers

Resolution of Failed Banks by Deposit Insurers
Author: Thorsten Beck
Publisher: World Bank Publications
Total Pages: 34
Release: 2006
Genre: Bancos
ISBN:

"There is a wide cross-country variation in the institutional structure of bank failure resolution, including the role of the deposit insurer. The authors use quantitative analysis for 57 countries and discuss specific country cases to illustrate this variation. Using data for over 1,700 banks across 57 countries, they show that banks in countries where the deposit insurer has the responsibility of intervening failed banks and the power to revoke membership in the deposit insurance scheme are more stable and less likely to become insolvent. Involvement of the deposit insurer in bank failure resolution thus dampens the negative effect that deposit insurance has on banks' risk taking. "--World Bank web site.

Globalization and International Investment

Globalization and International Investment
Author: Fiona Beveridge
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 522
Release: 2017-07-05
Genre: Law
ISBN: 1351933051

This volume brings together a broad range of articles on international law and foreign investment which together provide a contemporary overview of the diverse range of issues and perspectives which continue to exercise policy-makers and scholars alike. Central to this collection is the tension between market-oriented reforms on the one hand, raising issues of market access and protection of investors, and corporate social responsibility discourses on the other, raising concerns about environmental protection and respect for human and labour rights. Regional perspectives on these issues reveal differing priorities and approaches.