December 2000 (Revised May 2002)

Information Costs and Home Bias: An Analysis of U.S. Holdings of Foreign Equities

Alan G. Ahearne, William L. Griever, and Francis E. Warnock

Abstract:

We test extant hypotheses of the home bias in equity holdings using high quality cross-border holdings data and quantitative measures of barriers to international investment. The effects of direct barriers to international investment, when statistically significant, are not economically meaningful. More important are information asymmetries that owe to the poor quality and low credibility of financial information in many countries. While a direct measure of information costs is not available, some foreign firms have reduced these costs by publicly listing their securities in the United States, where investor protection regulations elicit standardized, credible financial information. A proxy for the reduction in information asymmetries—the portion of a country's market that has a public U.S. listing—is a major determinant of a country’s weight in U.S. investors' portfolios. Foreign countries whose firms do not alleviate information costs by opting into the U.S. regulatory environment are more severely underweighted in U.S. equity portfolios.

Original version (PDF)

Keywords: Information asymmetries, investor protection, accounting standards, portfolio choice

PDF: Full Paper

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Last Update: February 05, 2021