Title: The Performance of International Equity Portfolios
1The Performance of International Equity Portfolios
- Frank Warnock
- Darden Business School (University of Virginia)
- and
- Federal Reserve Board
2Investors are venturing abroad to a greater
extent...
3 but are still underweight foreign equities
relative to global benchmarks.
Share in World Markets
Share in US Portfolios
4Main Question Do investors perform poorly when
they venture abroad?
- Theory says yes.
- Foreign investors may be at an information
disadvantage. - Empirical work says probably, but is limited.
- Some work from the 1980s on US mutual funds.
More recent work on UK fund managers performance
in the US and three other markets.
5What We Do
- Form data on the monthly positions of US
investors in 40 non-US markets. - Within each country, we assume they hold the
market, so our paper is about country picking,
not stock picking. - Find that US investors, as a whole, were able to
beat the MSCI benchmark, especially since 1990,
in both developed and emerging markets. - Higher Sharpe ratios through higher returns and
lower volatility. - We examine unhedged returns, so could owe to the
ability to forecast exchange rates(but not
likely). - Explore potential reasons for the strong
performance.
6Monthly International Portfolios, Dec 1976 Dec
2001
- Infrequent comprehensive surveys of cross-border
holdings act as fixed points. - To interpolate positions between survey dates,
utilize monthly capital flows data and MSCI/IFC
price returns. - Errors in capital flows data force us to restate
the flows. - Result Benchmark-consistent positions and
flows between the US and 40 countries.
7 8 Mean (Standard Deviation) of Monthly Excess
Returns (in , 1990-2001)
9Reasons for the Strong Performance
Reason 1 Avoided Returns-Chasing Behavior
- In the theoretical model of Brennan and Cao (JF
1997), informational disadvantages lead to
returns-chasing behavior, which Choe, Kho, and
Stulz (NBER 2004) argue leads to poor
performance. - In contrast, we find no evidence of momentum
trading, but rather a tendency to sell past
winners.
10Reasons for the Strong Performance
Reason 2 Exploited Past Price Information
- More specifically, we do not find that they had
superior conditional performance. - Yes, they beat the MSCI benchmark.
- But, using conditional returns-based and
conditional weight-based models, we find no
evidence that they moved into markets just prior
to positive abnormal returns (or out of markets
before negative abnormal returns).
11Reasons for the Strong Performance
Reason 3 Tilted Portfolios Toward Countries with
Strong Governance and More Cross-Listed Stocks
- Yes, they beat the MSCI, but US investors
foreign portfolios - Performed significantly worse than a cross-listed
portfolio (formed by applying cross-listing
weights to MSCI returns), and - Performed worse than a governance portfolio
(formed by applying governance weights to MSCI
returns).
12 Mean (Standard Deviation) of Monthly Excess
Returns (in , 1990-2001)
13Underweighted Japan and Emerging Asia
Overweighted LatAm and Scandinavia
Data are average annual averages from 1990-2001.
Excludes countries for which the overweight is
less than 0.3 in absolute value.
14Conclusion
- Using monthly bilateral holdings measures between
the US and 40 countries - We show that US investors foreign portfolios
beat the MSCI benchmark. - The superior performance appears to owe to
avoiding returns-chasing behavior, skillfully
exploiting past information, and weighting
portfolios towards countries with good governance
and more cross-listed stocks.
15Further Information/Disclaimer
- This presentation is based on joint work with
Charlie Thomas and Jon Wongswan of the Federal
Reserve Board (International Finance Discussion
Paper 817, August 2004). - Due to data limitations, the talk is decidedly
US-centric and is about country picking, not
stock picking. - Disclaimer The views are solely the
responsibility of the authors and should not be
interpreted as reflecting the views of the Board
of Governors of the Federal Reserve System or of
any other person associated with the Federal
Reserve System.