Decomposing the U.S. external returns differential |
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Authors: | Stephanie E. Curcuru Francis E. Warnock |
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Affiliation: | a Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 20th Street and Constitution Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20551, United States b Union College, 807 Union Street, Schenectady, NY 12308, United States c Darden Graduate School of Business, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22906-6550, United States d Institute for International Integration Studies, Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland e Globalization and Monetary Policy Institute, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, 2200 N. Pearl Street, Dallas, Texas 75201, United States f National Bureau of Economic Research, 1050 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02138, United States |
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Abstract: | We decompose the returns differential between U.S. portfolio claims and liabilities into the composition, return, and timing effects. Our most striking and robust finding is that foreigners exhibit poor timing when reallocating between bonds and equities within their U.S. portfolios. The poor timing of foreign investors-caused primarily by deliberate trading, not a lack of portfolio rebalancing-contributes positively to the U.S. external returns differential. We find no evidence that the poor timing is driven by mechanical reserve accumulation by emerging market countries; rather, it is driven almost entirely by the poor timing of rich, developed (mainly European) countries. Finally, while poor foreign timing appears to be persistent across subsamples, other terms in our decomposition (the composition and return effects and U.S. timing abroad), as well as the overall differential, are sometimes negative, sometimes positive, and usually indistinguishable from zero. |
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Keywords: | Returns differential Timing effect |
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