Industry Risk and Market Integration
- 1 February 2004
- journal article
- Published by Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS) in Management Science
- Vol. 50 (2) , 207-221
- https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.1030.0184
Abstract
Traditionally, integration has been studied at the country level. With increasing economic integration, industrial reorganization, and blurring of national boundaries (e.g., European Union (EU)), it is important to investigate global integration at the industry level. We argue that country-level integration (segmentation) does not preclude industry-level segmentation (integration). Indeed, our results suggest that a country is integrated with (segmented from) the world capital markets only if most of her industries are integrated (segmented). We also show that although global industry risk is small, it can be priced for certain industries. Industries that are priced differently from either the world or domestic markets represent incremental opportunities for international diversification.imperfect industry integration, global industry risk, conditional asset pricing, industry information variables, portfolio diversificationKeywords
This publication has 43 references indexed in Scilit:
- Spurious Regressions in Financial Economics?The Journal of Finance, 2003
- Long-horizon regressions: theoretical results and applicationsJournal of Financial Economics, 2003
- Asymmetric Volatility and Risk in Equity MarketsThe Review of Financial Studies, 2000
- Implementing Statistical Criteria to Select Return Forecasting Models: What Do We Learn?The Review of Financial Studies, 1999
- Common risk factors in the returns on stocks and bondsJournal of Financial Economics, 1993
- Tests of integration, mild segmentation and segmentation hypothesesJournal of Banking & Finance, 1992
- The Cross‐Section of Expected Stock ReturnsThe Journal of Finance, 1992
- Quasi-maximum likelihood estimation and inference in dynamic models with time-varying covariancesEconometric Reviews, 1992
- The World Price of Covariance RiskThe Journal of Finance, 1991
- Integration vs. Segmentation in the Canadian Stock MarketThe Journal of Finance, 1986