| Title: | STOCK MARKET VALUATIONS AND FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT |
| Authors: | Baker, Malcolm Foley, C. Fritz Wurgler, Jeffrey |
| Issue Date: | 22-Dec-2004 |
| Series/Report no.: | SC-AM-04-05 |
| Abstract: | We outline and test two theories of foreign direct investment based on capital market mispricing. The “cheap assets” or “fire-sale” theory considers FDI inflows as the purchase of undervalued host country assets, while the “cheap financial capital” theory views FDI outflows as a natural use of the relatively low-cost capital available to overvalued firms in the source country. The results are consistent with the cheap financial capital theory: FDI flows are unrelated to host country stock market valuations, as measured by the aggregate market-to-book-value ratio, but are strongly positively related to source country valuations and negatively related to future source country stock returns, especially when capital account restrictions limit cross-country arbitrage. |
| URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/2451/26651 |
| Appears in Collections: | Asset Management |
Files in This Item:
| File | Description | Size | Format | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| S-AM-04-05.pdf | 168.77 kB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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