Abstract
In this paper an intertemporal model of international asset pricing is constructed which admits differences in consumption opportunity sets across countries. It is shown that the real expected excess return on a risky asset is proportional to the covariance of the return of that asset with changes in the world real consumption rate. (World real consumption does not, in general, correspond to a basket of commodities consumed by all investors.) The model has no barriers to international investment, but it is compatible with empirical facts which contradict the predictions of earlier models and which seem to imply that asset markets are internationally segmented. © 1981.
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CITATION STYLE
Stulz, R. M. (1981). A model of international asset pricing. Journal of Financial Economics, 9(4), 383–406. https://doi.org/10.1016/0304-405X(81)90005-2
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