We investigate how politics (party orientation, national elections, and strength of democratic institutions) affect stock market volatility. We hypothesize that labor-intensive industries, industries with larger exposure to foreign trade, industries whose operations require efficient contracts, and industries susceptible to government expropriation are more sensitive to changes in political environment. Using a large panel of industry-country-year observations, we show that politically-sensitive industries exhibit higher volatilities during national elections. Volatility is also higher for labor-intensive industries under leftist governments. Moreover, governance-sensitive industries and industries under a higher risk of expropriation are m...
There is a resurgence in the literature in political science on how political risk affects multinati...
open access articleUsing panel data of 42 countries from 2001 to 2019, we examine whether political ...
The relatively high average returns on stocks are understood to be partly a function of the risk tak...
November 14, 2007Preliminary and incompleteWe investigate how politics (party orientation, national ...
We investigate how politics (party orientation, national elections, and strength of democratic insti...
We examine how local and global political risks affect industry return volatility. Our central premi...
This file was last viewed in Adobe Acrobat Pro.In recent decades, rising economic policy uncertainty...
We link the crosssection of firms' sensitivities to economic policy uncertainty to their subsequent ...
We examine the effect of political 'institutions' on economic growth volatility, using data from mor...
Markets and politics are intimately linked. Moreover, the extensive lobbying practices in the US evi...
This paper examines whether proxies of political risk exposure at the firm-level can predict the agg...
This thesis consists of three substantive chapters (3, 4, 5) on the impact of political risk on equi...
Cross-sectional time-series data from 14 stock markets, from 1973-1996, are used to study how compar...
This paper investigates a sample of 27 OECD countries to test whether national elections induce high...
There is a renewed interest in political science on how political risk affects multinational corpora...
There is a resurgence in the literature in political science on how political risk affects multinati...
open access articleUsing panel data of 42 countries from 2001 to 2019, we examine whether political ...
The relatively high average returns on stocks are understood to be partly a function of the risk tak...
November 14, 2007Preliminary and incompleteWe investigate how politics (party orientation, national ...
We investigate how politics (party orientation, national elections, and strength of democratic insti...
We examine how local and global political risks affect industry return volatility. Our central premi...
This file was last viewed in Adobe Acrobat Pro.In recent decades, rising economic policy uncertainty...
We link the crosssection of firms' sensitivities to economic policy uncertainty to their subsequent ...
We examine the effect of political 'institutions' on economic growth volatility, using data from mor...
Markets and politics are intimately linked. Moreover, the extensive lobbying practices in the US evi...
This paper examines whether proxies of political risk exposure at the firm-level can predict the agg...
This thesis consists of three substantive chapters (3, 4, 5) on the impact of political risk on equi...
Cross-sectional time-series data from 14 stock markets, from 1973-1996, are used to study how compar...
This paper investigates a sample of 27 OECD countries to test whether national elections induce high...
There is a renewed interest in political science on how political risk affects multinational corpora...
There is a resurgence in the literature in political science on how political risk affects multinati...
open access articleUsing panel data of 42 countries from 2001 to 2019, we examine whether political ...
The relatively high average returns on stocks are understood to be partly a function of the risk tak...