Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies Center on Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law Stanford University


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Stock Market Liberalization, Economic Reform, and Emerging Market Equity Prices

Journal Article

Author
Peter B. Henry - Stanford University

Published by
Journal of Finance, Vol. 55 no. 2, page(s) 529-564
April 2000


A stock market liberalization is a decision by a country's government to allow

foreigners to purchase shares in that country's stock market. On average, a country's aggregate equity price index experiences abnormal returns of 3.3 percent per month in real dollar terms during an eight-month window leading up to the implementation of its initial stock market liberalization. This result is consistent with the prediction of standard international asset pricing models that stock market liberalization may reduce the liberalizing country's cost of equity capital by allowing for risk sharing between domestic and foreign agents.

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