Risk Sharing and Asset Prices: Evidence from a Natural Experiment
- 1 June 2004
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in The Journal of Finance
- Vol. 59 (3) , 1295-1324
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1540-6261.2004.00663.x
Abstract
When countries liberalize their stock markets, firms that become eligible for foreign purchase (investible), experience an average stock price revaluation of 15.1%. Since the historical covariance of the average investible firm's stock return with the local market is roughly 200 times larger than its historical covariance with the world market, liberalization reduces the systematic risk associated with holding investible securities. Consistent with this fact: (1) the average effect of the reduction in systematic risk is 6.8 percentage points, or roughly two fifths of the total revaluation; and (2) the firm‐specific revaluations are directly proportional to the firm‐specific changes in systematic risk.All Related Versions
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Asset Pricing at the MillenniumThe Journal of Finance, 2000
- Foreign Speculators and Emerging Equity MarketsThe Journal of Finance, 2000
- Stock Market Liberalization, Economic Reform, and Emerging Market Equity PricesThe Journal of Finance, 2000
- The Internationalization of Equity MarketsPublished by University of Chicago Press ,1994
- The Stock Market, Profit, and InvestmentThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1993
- Efficient Capital Markets: IIThe Journal of Finance, 1991
- Price and Volume Effects Associated with Changes in the S&P 500 List: New Evidence for the Existence of Price PressuresThe Journal of Finance, 1986
- International Asset Pricing under Mild Segmentation: Theory and TestThe Journal of Finance, 1985
- Macroeconomics and finance: The role of the stock marketCarnegie-Rochester Conference Series on Public Policy, 1984
- International Portfolio Choice and Corporation Finance: A SynthesisThe Journal of Finance, 1983