Blog - Investing Notes
September 12, 2007 - The
Out-of-Country Experiences of Individual U.S. Investors
How and why do individual U.S. investors diversify internationally?
How significantly does this diversification affect their portfolio
results? In their April 2007 paper entitled "Foreign
Investments of U.S. Individual Investors: Causes and Consequences",
Warren Bailey, Alok Kumar and David Ng analyze the motivations
and consequences of foreign equity investment by individual
U.S. investors. Using personal characteristics and portfolio/trading
data from tens of thousands of individual brokerage accounts
at a major U.S. discount broker for the period 1/91-12/96,
they conclude that:
- Across the entire sample, the mean monthly return for
portfolios of internationally diversified individual investors
is close to an appropriate U.S. stock market benchmark,
but these investors achieve a significant reduction in mean
portfolio volatility and a significant increase in mean
portfolio Sharpe ratio. International diversification offers
minimal benefit, however, to investors whose domestic
holdings are well-diversified.
- Wealthy, experienced investors are more likely to diversify
internationally. These sophisticated investors on average
enhance risk-adjusted portfolio performance by significantly
lowering return volatility and moderately increasing
raw returns. Domestic diversification and conservatism (substantial
dividend returns) also indicate a tendency to diversify
internationally via foreign equity funds.
- Individuals with poor domestic portfolio performance seem
to extend losing trading practices by sometimes diversifying
into individual foreign stocks (rather than funds).
These investors miss most of the benefits OF international
diversification.
- Behaviorally-biased investors tend to underutilize or
misuse international diversification and also miss most
of the associated benefits. Specifically:
- Individuals who hold speculative stocks,
use options or otherwise trade aggressively in their
domestic portfolios tend to acquire speculative foreign
equities, indicating more a desire to gamble than to
diversify.
- Individuals who display behavioral
tendencies such as local bias (domestic portfolios
tilted towards geographically nearby companies), narrow
framing (concentrating on the performances of individual
holdings rather than on overall portfolio performance)
and the disposition effect (selling winners too
quickly and holding losers too long) are less likely
to invest in foreign equities. When they do diversify
internationally, they tend to acquire individual foreign
stocks rather than foreign equity funds.
In summary, international diversification as implemented
by individual U.S. investors on average neither compensates
for bad investing/trading practices nor dramatically enhances
good ones. While sophisticated investors generally improve
returns and (especially) reduce portfolio volatility via positions
in foreign equity funds, underperforming investors tend to
underutilize or misuse foreign holdings.
For related research, see Blog
Synthesis: Individual Investing.