Hedges of the Second Republic: firms, equity investors and political uncertainty in a nascent democracy, 1930&-1936
Articles
Overview
published in
- Revista de Historia Economica Journal
publication date
- January 2025
start page
- 33
end page
- 61
issue
- 1
volume
- 43
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
full text
International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)
- 0212-6109
Electronic International Standard Serial Number (EISSN)
- 2041-3335
abstract
- We study how Spanish equity investors assessed firms¿ exposure to political risk during the regime change of the 1930s. We show that shifts in political uncertainty regularly predicted a general deterioration of future investment opportunities in the stock market. However, we also find that firms differed in their sensitivity to uncertainty, reflecting important differences in their perceived exposures to political risk. The negative impact of uncertainty was significantly milder for firms with political connections to republican parties. The price of some stocks increased in periods of heightened uncertainty, thus allowing investors to hedge against reinvestment risk. In the case of firms that became targets of hostile political actions, we observe that investors frequently adjusted their assessment of individual stocks to changes in firm-specific political circumstances. Over the whole period of the Second Republic, investors' systematic preference for safer equity hedges led to a continuous decline in the price of stocks perceived as more exposed to political risk.
Classification
subjects
- History
keywords
- political uncertainty; political risk; politically connected firms; equity returns; risk; factors; hedging strategies; spain; interwar period