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Title: Are Financial Crises Indeed “Crises?” Evidence from the Emerging ADR Market
Authors: Pasquariello, Paolo
Keywords: Regime Shifts; Financial Crises; ADRs; Market Efficiency
Issue Date: 6-Apr-2006
Series/Report no.: 009
Abstract: The recent episodes of financial turmoil in Mexico, East Asia, Russia, Brazil, and Argentina are often dubbed financial crises. However, the severe downturns in equity markets, abrupt currency devaluations, and massive capital flight that characterize these events can still be deemed compatible with efficient and well-functioning financial markets. Thus, why is a financial crisis a “crisis?” To answer this question, we conduct an empirical investigation of the efficiency and pricing of the emerging ADR market. More specifically, using a non-parametric technique, we test for regime shifts in two basic structural relationships for ADR returns in 20 emerging countries, identified via arbitrage and capital mobility considerations, that should always hold in efficient and integrated capital markets. We find that those “normal” market conditions were instead violated in proximity of financial crises: The law of one price often weakened (by 54% on average), and domestic sources of risk became more important (often by more than 100%) for many depositary receipts in our sample. We also find that some popular explanations for the occurrence of financial crises in emerging economies, in particular uncertainty among investors, exchange rate volatility, economic integration, and liquidity (but not contagion, financial integration, currency devaluations, capital flight, capital controls, or the legal environment for stock trading and holding) made their equity markets less efficient as well. Based on this evidence, we can state with greater confidence that those episodes of financial turmoil were indeed “crises.”
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/21618
Appears in Collections:International Policy Center - Working Paper Series
Ross School of Business

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