Investor Diversification and International Equity Markets
15 Pages Posted: 17 Oct 2007 Last revised: 28 Apr 2023
Date Written: January 1991
Abstract
The benefits of international diversification have been recognized for decades. In spite of this, most investors hold nearly all of their wealth in domestic assets. In this paper, we construct new estimates of the international equity portfolio holdings of investors in the U.S., Japan, and Britain. More than 98% of the equity portfolio of Japanese investors is held domestically; the analogous percentages are 94% for the U.S., and 82% for Britain. We use a simple model of investor preferences and behavior to show that current portfolio patterns imply that investors in each nation expect returns in their domestic equity market to be several hundred basis points higher than returns in other markets. This lack of diversification appears to be the result of investor choices, rather than institutional constraints.
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Why is There a Home Bias? An Analysis of Foreign Portfolio Equity Ownership in Japan
By Jun-koo Kang and René M. Stulz
-
By Gur Huberman
-
Home Bias and the High Turnover
By Linda L. Tesar and Ingrid M. Werner
-
The Determinants of Cross-Border Equity Flows
By Richard Portes and Hélène Rey
-
Corporate Governance and the Home Bias
By Lee Pinkowitz, Rohan Williamson, ...
-
The Determinants of Cross-Border Equity Flows
By Richard Portes and Hélène Rey
-
The Portfolio Flows of International Investors, I
By Kenneth Froot, Paul G.j. O'connell, ...
-
The Information Content of International Portfolio Flows
By Kenneth Froot and Tarun Ramadorai
-
The Information Content of International Portfolio Flows
By Kenneth Froot and Tarun Ramadorai
-
Information Costs and Home Bias: An Analysis of U.S. Holdings of Foreign Equities
By Alan G. Ahearne, William L. Griever, ...