How ETFs Amplify the Global Financial Cycle in Emerging Markets
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Show full item recordAuthor/s:
Converse, Nathan
Levy Yeyati, Eduardo
Williams, Tomas
Date:
2017-12Abstract
Since the early 2000s exchange-traded funds (ETFs) have grown to become an important investment
vehicle worldwide. In this paper, we study how their growth affects the sensitivity
of international capital flows to the global financial cycle. We combine comprehensive fundlevel
data on investor flows with a novel identification strategy that controls for unobservable
time-varying economic conditions at the investment destination. For dedicated emerging market
funds, we find that the sensitivity of investor flows to global risk factors for equity (bond)
ETFs is 1.5 (1.25) times higher than for equity (bond) mutual funds. In turn, we show that
in countries where ETFs hold a larger share of financial assets, total cross-border equity flows
and prices are significantly more sensitive to global risk factors. We conclude that the growing
role of ETFs as a channel for international capital flows amplifies the incidence of the global
financial cycle in emerging markets.