nep-ifn New Economics Papers
on International Finance
Issue of 2013‒11‒14
three papers chosen by
Vimal Balasubramaniam
University of Oxford

  1. Going public abroad By Cecilia Caglio; Kathleen Weiss Hanley; Jennifer Marietta-Westberg
  2. International Trade Price Stickiness and Exchange Rate and Pass-Through in Micro Data: A Case Study on US-China Trade By Mina Kim; Deokwoo Nam; Jian Wang; Jason Wu
  3. Linkages across sovereign debt markets By Cristina Arellano; Yan Bai

  1. By: Cecilia Caglio; Kathleen Weiss Hanley; Jennifer Marietta-Westberg
    Abstract: This paper examines the decision to go public abroad using a sample of 17,808 IPOs. Although only 6% of initial public offerings are offered abroad, these represent approximately 25% of total IPO proceeds. We find that alleviating informational frictions in order to obtain greater offering proceeds is an important determinant of the decision to go public abroad. Foreign and global IPOs originate from countries with significantly fewer recent IPOs in the same industry, less developed capital markets, and lower disclosure standards. Contrary to assumptions in prior research, we also show that the determinants of whether to go public abroad or to go public at home and cross-list later are not similar. In addition, we find that the preferences for going public in certain foreign markets have changed over time and the factors that impact the choice of listing market are not consistent across all countries.
    Date: 2013
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:fip:fedgfe:2013-68&r=ifn
  2. By: Mina Kim (Bureau of Labor Statistics); Deokwoo Nam (City University of Hong Kong); Jian Wang (Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas and Hong Kong Institute for Monetary Research); Jason Wu (Federal Reserve Board)
    Abstract: The interaction between the exchange rate regime, trade firms' price-setting behavior, and exchange rate pass-through (ERPT) is an important topic in international economics. This paper studies this using a goods-level dataset of US-China trade prices collected by the US Bureau of Labor Statistics. We document that the duration of US-China trade prices has declined almost 30% since China abandoned its hard peg to the US dollar in June 2005. A benchmark menu cost model that is calibrated to the data can replicate the documented decrease in price stickiness. We also estimate ERPT of Renminbi (RMB) appreciation into US import prices between 2005 and 2008. Goods-level data allows us to estimate that the lifelong ERPT is close to one for goods that have at least one price change, but less than one-half when all goods are included. This finding can be attributed to the fact that around 40% of the goods never experienced a price change, and supports the hypothesis that price changes that take the form of product replacements may bias ERPT estimates downwards.
    Keywords: Price Stickiness, Menu Cost Model, International Trade Prices, RMB, Exchange Rate Pass-Through
    JEL: E31 F14 F31
    Date: 2013–10
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:hkm:wpaper:202013&r=ifn
  3. By: Cristina Arellano; Yan Bai
    Abstract: We develop a multicountry model in which default in one country triggers default in other countries. Countries are linked to one another by borrowing from and renegotiating with common lenders with concave payoffs. A foreign default increases incentives to default at home because it makes new borrowing more expensive and defaulting less costly. Foreign defaults tighten home bond prices because they lower lenders' payoffs. Foreign defaults make home default less costly by lowering future recoveries, because countries can extract more surplus if they renegotiate simultaneously. In our model, the home country may default only because the foreign country is defaulting. This dependency arises during fundamental foreign defaults, where the foreign country defaults because of high debt and low income, and also during self-fulfilling defaults, where both countries default only because the other is defaulting. The simultaneity in defaults induces a correlation in interest rate spreads across countries. The model can rationalize some of the recent economic events in Europe.
    Keywords: Europe ; Debt
    Date: 2013
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:fip:fedmsr:491&r=ifn

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