This study investigates attributes of local firms that determine investment biases using
mutual funds holding data across 48 markets. Controlling for variations in market level
environments, we find that firm characteristics related to transaction cost, corporate
governance, information asymmetry and local familiarity create significant barriers to
foreign investments. The extent to which information asymmetry and familiarity
constrain investment allocation is more observable for foreign than for domestic investors,
even in developed and liberalized markets. However, in emerging and restricted markets,
variations in foreign investment bias are mainly driven by market level cross-border
investment barriers. Overall, the well-documented “home bias” phenomenon may be a
joint effect of both firm and market level investment barriers.
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