Objective research and reviews to aid investing decisions
Are there diversification and return advantages from getting off the beaten path (to small-capitalization stocks) when diversifying internationally? In their September 2006 paper entitled "International Diversification with Large- and Small-Cap Stocks", Cheol Eun, Wei Huang and Sandy Lai compare the benefits of using large-capitalization and small-capitalization stocks to diversify across countries. Taking the perspective of a dollar-based investor, they examine diversification across ten countries with open capital markets (Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom and the United States). Using monthly size and return data for three market capitalization-based funds (large-cap, mid-cap and small-cap) for each country over the period 1980-1999, they conclude that:
In summary, small-capitalization stock funds from other countries offer optimal diversification benefits for investors holding broad U.S. stock market indexes.
For related research, see Blog Synthesis: The Size Effect. See also our blog entries of:
6/22/06 on diversifying by industry rather than country; and,
4/28/06 on global pricing of large-capitalization stocks.