Regional Contagion and the Globalization of Securities Markets
Author(s) -
Guillermo A. Calvo,
Enrique G. Mendoza
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
psn: markets and investment (topic)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.3386/w7153
Subject(s) - globalization , business , financial contagion , financial system , economics , monetary economics , financial economics , financial market , finance , market economy
This paper argues that the globalization of securities markets may promote contagion among investors by weakening incentives for gathering costly country-specific information and by strengthening incentives for imitating arbitrary market portfolios. In the presence of short-selling constraints, the utility gain of gathering information at a fixed cost converges to a constant level and may diminish as securities markets grow. Moreover, if a portfolio manager's marginal cost for yielding below-market returns exceeds the marginal gain for above-market returns, there is a range of optimal portfolios in which all investors imitate arbitrary market portfolios and this range widens as the market grows. Numerical simulations suggest that these frictions can have significant quantitative implications and they may induce large capital flows in emerging markets.
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