Devaluation Expectations and the Stock Market : The Case of Mexico in 1994/95

Using company-level data, this paper examines the relative stock-market performance of firms with different foreign-exchange exposures around the time of the 1994/95 Mexican crisis. Contrary to what one might have expected given the alleged peso overvaluation, exporting firms outperformed the market beginning in late 1993. Although interest rates fail to show a clear confidence loss in the exchange rate regime, the relative performance of net exporters suggests that expectations of devaluation increased continuously. The methodology presented is relevant beyond the Mexican case: sectoral differences in stock market performance may constitute valuable leading indicators of exchange rate changes in emerging markets.
Publication date: January 2000
ISBN: 9781451844658
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Finance , Finance , Money and Monetary Policy , Money and Monetary Policy , Stock market , Mexican peso devaluations , event study , exchange rate exposure , credibility of exchange rate regimes , leading crisis indicators , exchange rate , exchange rate expectations , exchange rates , exchange rate regime

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