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In Rememberance: World Trade Center (WTC)

Morck, Randall, Bernard Yeung, and Wayne Yu, "The Information Content of Stock Markets: Why do emerging markets have synchronous stock price movements?", Journal of Financial Economics, Vol. 58, No. 1, (October 2000), pp. 215-260.

Abstract: Stock prices move together more in poor economies than in rich economies. This finding is not due to market size and is only partially explained by higher fundamentals correlation in low-income economies. However, measures of property rights do explain this difference. The systematic component of returns variation is large in emerging markets, and appears unrelated to fundamentals co-movement, consistent with noise trader risk. Among developed economy stock markets, higher firm-specific returns variation is associated with stronger public investor property rights. We propose that strong property rights promote informed arbitrage, which capitalizes detailed firm specific information.

JEL Classification: G12, G14, G15, G38, N20.

Keywords: Asset pricing, Information and market efficiency, Event studies, International financial markets, Financial economics.

Download paper (858K PDF) 46 pages

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