Two of the main puzzles in international economics are the consumption and the portfolio home biases. They are empirically related: countries that are more open to trade also have more interna-tionally diversified portfolios. In a two-country stochastic equilibrium model, I prove that introducing trade costs in goods market alone, as suggested by Obstfeld and Rogoff [2000], is not sufficient to explain these two puzzles simultaneously. On the contrary, for reasonable parameter values, trade costs create a foreign bias in portfolios. To reconcile facts and theory, I introduce a combination of small frictions in financial markets and trade costs in goods market. The interaction between the two types of frictions determines optimal portfolio a...
Why do investors trade a lot in foreign assets and hold so little of them in their portfolios? This ...
Despite the liberalization of capital ows among OECD countries, equity home bias remains sizable. We...
Despite the liberalization of capital ows among OECD countries, equity home bias remains sizable. We...
Two of the main puzzles in international economics are the consumption and the portfolio home biases...
Two of the main puzzles in international economics are the consumption and the portfolio home biases...
A debate has been raging in the general equilibrium literature on the extent to which trade costs im...
We investigate the impact of commodity market restrictions, such as nontradable goods, costs for tra...
Standard theory would predict that investors hold a well diversified portfolio of equities across th...
Home bias is a perennial feature of international capital markets. We review various explanations of...
In a recent paper, Fajgelbaum and Khandelwal (2016) develop a methodology to quantify the distributi...
We show that international trade in goods offers a compelling resolution of the portfolio home bias ...
Prepared for the Encyclopedia of financial globalizationPrepared for the encyclopedia of financial g...
We show that international trade in goods is the main determinant of international equity portfolios...
The fact that people prefer to hold domestic equities than foreign ones is still a puzzle for most e...
Wealthier people generally hold a larger part of their savings in risky assets. Using the US Survey...
Why do investors trade a lot in foreign assets and hold so little of them in their portfolios? This ...
Despite the liberalization of capital ows among OECD countries, equity home bias remains sizable. We...
Despite the liberalization of capital ows among OECD countries, equity home bias remains sizable. We...
Two of the main puzzles in international economics are the consumption and the portfolio home biases...
Two of the main puzzles in international economics are the consumption and the portfolio home biases...
A debate has been raging in the general equilibrium literature on the extent to which trade costs im...
We investigate the impact of commodity market restrictions, such as nontradable goods, costs for tra...
Standard theory would predict that investors hold a well diversified portfolio of equities across th...
Home bias is a perennial feature of international capital markets. We review various explanations of...
In a recent paper, Fajgelbaum and Khandelwal (2016) develop a methodology to quantify the distributi...
We show that international trade in goods offers a compelling resolution of the portfolio home bias ...
Prepared for the Encyclopedia of financial globalizationPrepared for the encyclopedia of financial g...
We show that international trade in goods is the main determinant of international equity portfolios...
The fact that people prefer to hold domestic equities than foreign ones is still a puzzle for most e...
Wealthier people generally hold a larger part of their savings in risky assets. Using the US Survey...
Why do investors trade a lot in foreign assets and hold so little of them in their portfolios? This ...
Despite the liberalization of capital ows among OECD countries, equity home bias remains sizable. We...
Despite the liberalization of capital ows among OECD countries, equity home bias remains sizable. We...