Living with the "enemy": An analysis of foreign investment in the Japanese equity market
Hamao
Yasushi
author
Columbia University. Business
Mei
Jianping
author
Columbia University. Center on Japanese Economy and Business
contributor
originator
text
Working papers
New York
Center on Japanese Economy and Business, Graduate School of Business, Columbia University
2000
This paper studies the impact of foreign investment on domestic financial markets. It examines the empirical validity of some protectionist claims used by regulators to restrict foreign investment. These people argue that 1) trading by foreign investors tends to increase market volatility more than trading by domestic investors, 2) foreign investors have sophisticated investment technology to which domestic investors do not have access so that domestic investors tend to "lose" to foreign investors, and 3) foreign investors tend to be short term investors whose investments are mostly driven by expectation of short-term gains rather than long-term fundamentals such as corporate dividend growth. We find there is no evidence supporting these claims from the Japanese experience. To the contrary, we find that foreign investors tend to be long-term contrarian players in the market and their presence helps to improve liquidity in the Japanese market. Thus, our results support the hypothesis that international free flow of equity capital is beneficial to domestic markets.
Economics, Commerce-Business
Center on Japanese Economy and Business Working Papers
180
http://hdl.handle.net/10022/AC:P:305
English
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2011-02-10 10:15:18 -0500
2011-07-21 15:35:14 -0400
2540
eng