YALE DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS
That's Where the Money Was: Foreign Bias and English Benjamin Chabot and Christopher Kurz June 2009 Why did Victorian Britain invest so much capital abroad? We collect
over 500,000 monthly returns of British and foreign securities trading in London and the
United States between 1866 and 1907. These heretofore-unknown data allow us to better
quantify the historical benefits of international diversification and revisit the question
of whether British Victorian investor bias starved new domestic industries of capital. We
find no evidence of bias. A British investor who increased his investment in new British
industry at the expense of foreign diversification would have been worse off. The addition
of foreign assets significantly expanded the mean-variance frontier and resulted in
utility gains equivalent to a meaningful increase in lifetime consumption. |