We examine how mutual funds from 26 developed and developing countries allocate their investment between domestic and foreign equity markets and what factors determine their asset allocations worldwide. We find robust evidence that these funds, in aggregate, allocate a disproportionately larger fraction of investment to domestic stocks. Results indicate that the stock market development and familiarity variables have significant, but asymmetric, effects on the domestic bias (domestic investors overweighting the local markets) and foreign bias (foreign investors under or overweighting the overseas markets), and that economic development, capital controls, and withholding tax variables have significant effects only on the foreign bias
This paper examines whether the widely reported phenomena of home and foreign biases (i.e. sub-optim...
We analyze foreigners' and domestic institutional investors' holdings of U.S. equities and find comm...
Non professional investors display a much higher degree of home bias than fiancial investors suggest...
We examine how mutual funds from 26 developed and developing countries allocate their investment bet...
The purpose of the study is to seek a better understanding of the investment allocation behaviour of...
International audienceDistinguishing two components of the preference for geographical proximity – t...
This dissertation consists of three stand-alone but interrelated empirical studies investigating var...
We analyze the US equity holdings of more than 3000 non-US-based mutual funds from 22 countries and ...
We analyze the US equity holdings of more than 3000 non-US-based mutual funds from 22 countries and ...
We examine the portfolio rebalancing, measured by the equity churn rate, of mutual funds from 29 cou...
Using aggregate data on bilateral cross-border equity holdings, we investigate whether investors cor...
Finance theory suggests that the optimal international equity portfolio investment by home and forei...
The paper employs International Capital Asset Pricing (ICAPM), Mean-variance, Global minimum varianc...
Despite the liberalization of foreign portfolio investment around the globe since the early 1980s, t...
Economic reasoning suggests that financial globalization that encourages optimal international portf...
This paper examines whether the widely reported phenomena of home and foreign biases (i.e. sub-optim...
We analyze foreigners' and domestic institutional investors' holdings of U.S. equities and find comm...
Non professional investors display a much higher degree of home bias than fiancial investors suggest...
We examine how mutual funds from 26 developed and developing countries allocate their investment bet...
The purpose of the study is to seek a better understanding of the investment allocation behaviour of...
International audienceDistinguishing two components of the preference for geographical proximity – t...
This dissertation consists of three stand-alone but interrelated empirical studies investigating var...
We analyze the US equity holdings of more than 3000 non-US-based mutual funds from 22 countries and ...
We analyze the US equity holdings of more than 3000 non-US-based mutual funds from 22 countries and ...
We examine the portfolio rebalancing, measured by the equity churn rate, of mutual funds from 29 cou...
Using aggregate data on bilateral cross-border equity holdings, we investigate whether investors cor...
Finance theory suggests that the optimal international equity portfolio investment by home and forei...
The paper employs International Capital Asset Pricing (ICAPM), Mean-variance, Global minimum varianc...
Despite the liberalization of foreign portfolio investment around the globe since the early 1980s, t...
Economic reasoning suggests that financial globalization that encourages optimal international portf...
This paper examines whether the widely reported phenomena of home and foreign biases (i.e. sub-optim...
We analyze foreigners' and domestic institutional investors' holdings of U.S. equities and find comm...
Non professional investors display a much higher degree of home bias than fiancial investors suggest...