Scuttle for shelter: flight-to-safety and political uncertainty during the Spanish Second Republic

Author:

Battilossi Stefano1,Houpt Stefan O2,Verdickt Gertjan3

Affiliation:

1. Universidad Carlos III de Madrid Department of Social Sciences and L. Figuerola Institute of Social Sciences History, , 28903 Getafe, Spain , battilos@clio.uc3m.es

2. Universidad Carlos III de Madrid Department of Social Sciences and L. Figuerola Institute of Social Sciences History, , 28903 Getafe, Spain

3. Department of Financial Management, KU Leuven , Naamsestraat 69, 3000 Leuven, Belgium

Abstract

Abstract The Spanish Second Republic was a unique experiment of democratization in interwar Europe, which was characterized by extreme levels of political uncertainty. We find that investors responded to shifts in uncertainty by selling stocks in favor of government bonds—a behavior known as flight-to-safety. Additionally, we find that political uncertainty caused stock market stress and induced significant differences in the cross-section of expected stock returns, consistent with the exposures to political uncertainty. The fact that investors recurrently scuttled to shelter into government bonds suggests that they did not perceive a radical change in the political regime as an immediate and credible threat.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Economics, Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous),History

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