Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-vdxz6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-26T05:12:01.797Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Why did French Savers buy Foreign Assets before 1914? A Decomposition of the Benefits from Diversification1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 January 2015

Get access

Summary

This paper examines the question as to whether, before 1914, French savers bought foreign assets to gain higher foreign returns or because of low correlation. Using tools of the Modern Portfolio Theory, the benefit from international diversification is decomposed into these two components, using a counterfactual hypothesis of perfect correlation between two assets. This approach allows an original measure of the respective share of the higher foreign returns and the low correlation in the benefit of diversification. The argument is put forward that French investors were mainly attracted by weak foreign correlation with domestic assets, rather than higher foreign returns.

Cet article étudie si les épargnants français d'avant 1914 achetaient des titres étrangers pour leur plus forte rentabilité ou à cause de leur faible corrélation. En utilisant les outils de la Théorie Moderne du Portefeuille, le bénéfice d'une diversification internationale est scindé entre ces deux composantes grâce à une hypothèse contrefactuelle de parfaite corrélation. Cette approche permet une mesure originale du rôle respectif de la plus forte rentabilité étrangère et de la faible corrélation dans le bénéfice de diversification. Il apparaît que leş investisseurs français étaient principalement motivés par la faible corrélation avec les actifs domestiques que par les rentabilités étrangères plus élevées.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Université catholique de Louvain, Institut de recherches économiques et sociales 2013 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

1

Many thanks to three anonymous referees, Georges Gallais-Hamonno, Jean-Jacques Rosa, Christian Rietsch, Maxime Merli, Eugene White, Kim Oosterlinck, Lyndon Moore, Larry Neal, Elroy Dimson, Mike Stanton, Sandrine Tobelem, Elisa Newby, Patrice Baubeau, Ranald Michie, Stefano Battilossi, Stepan Houpt, Angelo Riva, Emmanuelle Gabillon, Jean Belin, Amir Rezaee, Pierre-Cyrille Hautcoeur, Frans Buelens, Sean Hladkyj and all participants of these different meetings: Eurhistock (Madrid, 2009), Convergence Divergence during the Gold Standard (Fréjus, 2008), Association d’Etudes Sociales de la Finance (Paris, 2008), 26th Symposium in Money Banking and Finance (Orléans, 2009), GRETHA (Bordeaux, 2009).

2

KEDGE-BEM, Bordeaux Management School.

References

Barber, B.M. and Odean, T. (2000), “Trading Is Hazardous To Your Wealth: the Common Stock Investment Performance of Individual Investors”, Journal of Finance, 55, pp. 773806.Google Scholar
Bayroch, P. (1994), Mythes et paradoxes de l'histoire économique, La Découverte, Paris.Google Scholar
Benartzi, S. and Thaler, R.H. (2001), “Naïve Diversification Strategies in Defined Contribution Saving Plan”, American Economie Review, 91, pp. 7998.Google Scholar
Bouvier, J. (1961), Le Crédit Lyonnais de 1863 à 1882, les années de formation d'une banque de dépôt, Paris, SEVPEN.Google Scholar
Cameron, R., (1961), France and the Economie Development of Europe-1800-1914, Princeton, Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Chabot, B. and Kurz, C. (2010), ‘That's Were the Money Was: Foreign Bias and English Investment Abroad, 1866 1907’, Economic Journal, 120, pp. 10561079.Google Scholar
Cowles, A. and Associates (1939), Common-stocks Indexes, Blœmington, Principia Press.Google Scholar
Crédit, Lyonnais, (1963), Un siècle d'économie française (1863-1963), Paris, Draeger.Google Scholar
Edelstein, M. (2004), “Foreign Investment, Accumulation and Empire, 1860-1914”, in Floud, R. and Johnson, P. (eds.), The Cambridge Economie History of Modem Britain, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Edelstein, M. (1982), Overseas Investment in the Age of High Imperialism: the United Kingdom, New York, Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Esteves, R.P. (2011), “The Belle Epoque of International Finance. French Capital Exports, 1880-1914”, Working Paper, Oxford University, 534.Google Scholar
Falkenstein, E.G. (1996), “Preferences for Stock Characteristic as Revealed by Mutual Fund Portfolio Holdings”, Journal of Finance, 51, pp. 111135.Google Scholar
Feis, H. (1964), Europe the World's Banker 1870-1914, New-York, Kelley for the Council on Foreign Relations.Google Scholar
Flandreau, M. and Sicsic, P. (2003), “Crédit à la speculation et marché monétaire : le marché des report en France de 1875 à 1914”, in Feiertag, O. and Margairaz, M. (eds.), Politiques et pratiques des banques d'émission en Europe, Albin Michel, Paris, pp. 197222.Google Scholar
Goetzmann, W and Kumar, A. (2008), “Equity Portfolio Diversification”, Review of Finance, 12, pp. 433463.Google Scholar
Goetzmann, W.N. and Ukhov, A.D. (2006), “British Overseas Investment 1870-1913: A Modem Portfolio Theory Approach”, Review of Finance, 10, pp. 261300.Google Scholar
Goetzmann, W.N., Ibbotson, R. and Peng, L. (2000), “A New Historical Database for the NYSE 1815 to 1925: Performance and Predictability”, Journal of Financial Markets, 4, pp. 132.Google Scholar
INSEE, (1951), Annuaire statistique de la France, Paris, INSEE.Google Scholar
Klovland, J.T. (1994), “Pitfalls in the Estimation of the Yield on British Consol, 1850-1914”, Journal of Economic History, 54, pp. 164187.Google Scholar
Le Bris, D. and Hautcoeur, P-C. (2010), “A Challenge to the Triumphant Optimists: a Blue Chips Index for the Paris Stock Exchange (1854-2007)”, Financial History Review, 17, pp. 141183.Google Scholar
Lévy-Leboyer, M. (1977), “La balance des paiements et l'exportation des capitaux français”, in Lévy-Leboyer, M. (ed.), La position internationale de la France, Paris, EHESS.Google Scholar
Lévy-Leboyer, M. and Bourguignon, F. (1985), L'économie Française au XIXeme siècle, analyse macroéconomique. Paris, Économica.Google Scholar
Landon-Lane, J. and Oosterlinck, K. (2006), “Hope Spring Eternal – French Bondholders and the Soviet Repudiation (1915-1919)”, Review of Finance, 10, pp. 507535.Google Scholar
Mauro, P., Sussman, N. and Yafeh, Y. (2002), “Emerging Market Spreads: Then versus Now”, Quarterly Journal of Economics, 117, pp. 695733.Google Scholar
Michalet, C-A (1968), Les placements des épargnants français de 1815 à nos jours, Paris, PUF.Google Scholar
Parent, A. and Rault, C. (2004), “The Influences affecting French Assets Abroad Prior to 1914”, The Journal of Economic history, 64, pp. 328362.Google Scholar
Piketty, T., Postel-Vinay, G. and Rosenthal, J-L. (2011), “Inherited vs Self-Made Wealth: Theory and Evidence from a Rentier Society (Paris 1872-1937)”, Working Paper, Paris School of Economics, 2011–23.Google Scholar
Siegel, J. (1994), Stocks for the Long Run: a Guide to Selecting Markets for Long-Term Growth, New York, Irvine.Google Scholar
Ukhov, A. (2003), “Financial Innovation and Russian Government Debt Before 1918”, Working Paper, Yale ICF n. 0320.Google Scholar
Vaslin, J-M. (2007). « Le siècle d'or de la Rente française », in Gallais-Hamonno, G. (ed.), Le marché financier français au XIXime siècle. Paris, Publications de la Sorbonne.Google Scholar
Viaene, A. (2005), L'efficience de la bourse de Paris au XIXime siècle, Paris, Connaissance et Savoirs.Google Scholar
White, H. D. (1933), The French International Accounts, Cambridge, Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
White, E. (2007), “The Krach of 1882 and the Bailout of the Paris Bourse”, Clio-metrica, 1.2, pp. 115144.Google Scholar