The Pricing of Exchange Rate Risk and Stock Market Segmentation: The Canadian Case.
Empirical evidence by Eun and Resnick (1988), among others, has demonstrated the significance of exchange rate risk in the international asset allocation and they have noted that the risk is nondiversifiable. Yet, exchange rate risk was found by Jorion (1991) to be a risk factor that is not priced in the U.S. stock market. This study reexamines such counterintuitive results using data from the Toronto Stock Exchange. The evidence here weakly supports the pricing of the exchange rate risk. Further, the sample period in this study coincides with Jorion's to ensure that both studies examine the pricing of the exchange rate risk in the same global economic environment. The significance pricing of exchange rate risk in Canada and the insignificant pricing in the U.S. imply the possibility of market segmentation. Copyright 1995 by Kluwer Academic Publishers
Year of publication: |
1995
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Authors: | Cheung, C Sherman ; Kwan, Clarence C Y ; Lee, Jason |
Published in: |
Review of Quantitative Finance and Accounting. - Springer. - Vol. 5.1995, 4, p. 393-402
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Publisher: |
Springer |
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