Abstract
We find that about 13% of our sample of 817 European multinational firms experienced economically significant exposure effects to the Japanese yen, 14% to the US dollar and 22% to the UK pound. Our evidence differs substantially from the US experience and is robust across sub-sample periods, suggesting that a depreciating (appreciating) euro against foreign currencies has a net negative (positive) impact on European stock returns. Short-term exposure seems to be relatively well hedged, where considerable evidence of long-term exposure is found. Firms with weak liquidity positions tend to have smaller exposures. Foreign exposure is found to increase with firm size. © Blackwell Publishers Ltd, 2006.
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Muller, A., & Verschoor, W. F. C. (2006). European foreign exchange risk exposure. European Financial Management, 12(2), 195–220. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1354-7798.2006.00316.x
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