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Cross-country evidence of Islamic portfolio diversification: are there opportunities in Saudi Arabia?

Md Hakim Ali (Taylor’s Business School, Taylor’s University, Subang Jaya, Malaysia)
Md Akther Uddin (School of Business, University of Creative Technology, Chittagong, Bangladesh)
Mohammad Ashraful Ferdous Chowdhury (Department of Business Administration, Shahjalal University of Science and Technology, Sylhet, Bangladesh)
Mansur Masih (School of Graduate and Professional Studies, International Centre for Education in Islamic Finance (INCEIF), Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia)

Managerial Finance

ISSN: 0307-4358

Article publication date: 17 December 2018

Issue publication date: 20 February 2019

495

Abstract

Purpose

On the backdrop of growing importance of Shariah compliant equity markets, the purpose of this paper is to study cross-country portfolio diversification benefits for investors with major trading partners of Saudi Arabia, namely, USA, China, Japan, Germany and India, who have already invested or tend to invest in Saudi Arabian stock market.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors have investigated time invariant, dynamic correlations at different investments horizons of the investors among Islamic asset classes by applying relevant econometric techniques like multivariate generalized autoregressive conditional heteroscedastic –DCC and continuous wavelet transforms. For robustness, this study also applied maximal overlap discrete wavelet transform.

Findings

The findings tend to indicate that the Saudi Arabian investors have portfolio diversification benefits with all major trading partners in the short-term investment horizon. Interestingly, Saudi Arabian market has the least portfolio diversification benefits with the Chinese market. However, in the long run, all markets are correlated, yielding minimum portfolio diversification benefits and most importantly Saudi Arabian investors have portfolio diversification benefits with the Indian Islamic equity market in almost all investment horizons. The findings are highly consistent across different econometric technique estimations.

Research limitations/implications

The authors are only considering five major trading partners of Saudi Arabia. Also, the authors are using S&P and FTSE shari’ah index. Moreover, the time period of the study is constrained by the availability of shari’ah indices. Econometric limitations are also well documented in the literature.

Practical implications

The results could be beneficial for the investors, portfolio managers, hedge fund managers and institutional investors and also could be useful for the policy makers in their policy-making decisions.

Originality/value

Only very few studies have looked into the benefits of international portfolio diversification from the perspective of local investors as well as the portfolio diversification benefits with the major trading partners of Saudi Arabia. One of the novelties of the method is to make the stock investors, practitioners and policy makers aware of the portfolio diversification benefits available at different time scales such as 4, 8, 16, 32, 64 and 256 trading days as investment holding periods to unveil the true dynamics of co-movement between those different assets.

Keywords

Citation

Ali, M.H., Uddin, M.A., Chowdhury, M.A.F. and Masih, M. (2019), "Cross-country evidence of Islamic portfolio diversification: are there opportunities in Saudi Arabia?", Managerial Finance, Vol. 45 No. 1, pp. 36-53. https://doi.org/10.1108/MF-03-2018-0126

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2018, Emerald Publishing Limited

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