Multinational Finance Journal
© Multinational Finance Society, a non-profit corporation. All rights reserved.
Quarterly publication of the Multinational Finance Society ISSN 1096-1879
Volume 10, Numbers 1 & 2, 2006
The Determinants of
Foreign Currency Hedging by U.K. Non-Financial Firms
(Multinational Finance Journal, 2006, vol. 10, no. 1/2, pp. 1–41)
Amrit Judge
Middlesex University, U.K.
For 366 large non-financial U.K. firms, this paper reports the factors that are
important in determining their decision to hedge foreign currency exposure. The
results provide strong evidence of a relationship between expected financial
distress costs and the foreign currency hedging decision and more significantly
the foreign currency only hedging decision. These findings seem stronger than
those found in similar studies using U.S. data. The paper argues that this might
be due to the fact that several U.S. studies include in their non-hedging sample
other hedging firms, such as firms using non-derivative methods for currency
hedging and interest rate only hedgers, which might bias the results against the
a priori expectations. However, it might also be due to a country specific
institutional factor, that is, U.K. firms face higher expected costs of
financial distress due to differences in the bankruptcy codes in the two
countries (JEL:F30, G32, G33).
Keywords: corporate hedging, foreign currency hedging, derivatives,
financial distress, foreign currency debt, bankruptcy codes.
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Australian On-Market Buy-backs: An Examination of Valuation Issues
(Multinational Finance Journal, 2006, vol. 10, no. 1/2, pp. 43–79)
Jason Mitchell
University of Michigan Business School, U.S.A.
H. Y. Izan
University of Western Australia, Australia
Roslinda Lim
Macquarie University, Australia
A compelling reason for engaging in on-market buy-backs is that it provides a
signal about the undervaluation of the company. In this paper an alternative,
accounting based, method of determining fundamental value and undervaluation is
used, namely the Ohlson residual income valuation framework. It is found that
prior to the announcement buy-back companies are significantly undervalued
relative to comparable non-buy-back companies. This undervaluation is largely
but not totally removed in the period immediately following the on-market
buy-back implying on-market buy-backs are predominantly an effective signaling
mechanism. Where the firm cites undervaluation as a specific motive for the
buy-back then, in fact, a higher degree of undervaluation prior to the buy-back
is evident. The results provide evidence that management can, and does, identify
undervaluation and reduces this through the signaling mechanism of on-market
buy-backs (JEL: G34, G35, G38).
Keywords: buy-backs,
undervaluation, fundamental value.
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Defining and Dating Bull and Bear Markets: Two Centuries of Evidence
(Multinational Finance Journal, 2006, vol. 10, no. 1/2, pp. 81–116)
Liliana Gonzalez
University of Rhode Island, USA
Philip Hoang
Australian National University, Australia
John G. Powell
Massey University, New Zealand
Jing Shi
Jiangxi University of Finance and Economics, China and
The Australian National University, Australia
Despite widespread media interest in bull and bear markets, academic research
that seeks to formally define bull markets is almost non-existent. This paper
defines bull and bear markets in relation to a simple model of mean return regimes, and
implements the definition using two formal turning point detection methods to
demonstrate that two centuries of stock index returns can be separated into
economically and statistically significant bull and bear market states.
In-sample
analysis of the turning points identified by the detection procedures is
consistent with a two-state mean return model, a result that has important
implications
for capital asset pricing theory. The paper also examines the distinct return
characteristics and the persistent duration of the bull and bear market states
that
are identified, and tests the superior out of sample performance of ex-ante
trading rules developed from the turning point detection procedures (JEL: E32;
G12;
E44; C22).
Keywords: stock market, bulls and bears, turning point dating.
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Does Total Risk Matter? The Case of Emerging Markets
(Multinational Finance Journal, 2006, vol.10, no. 1/2, pp. 117–151)
Eric Girard
Siena College, U.S.A.
Amit Sinha
Indiana State University, U.S.A.
This paper examines the relationships between market risk premiums, time-varying
variance and covariance in forty-eight emerging, and seven developed capital
markets. We allow each market’s risk premium generating process to be
state-dependent by accounting for negative and positive market price of variance
and covariance risk. We find that half of the emerging markets exhibit reward to
world variance while for the other half are only sensitive to local risk
factors. We also find evidence of a negative relationship between reward to
local risk and reward to world risk. Accordingly, the relative importance of one
reward versus the other depends on the ever-changing correlation with the world
market. Finally, we show that correlation is not a factor that explains reward
to local risk in few segmented capital markets (JEL: G12; G15).
Keywords: reward to risk, conditional risk, market price of risk,
multivariate GARCH.
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