Gruber (1996) drew attention to the puzzle that investors buy actively-managed funds even though, on average, they underperform index funds. We uncover another puzzling fact about the market for actively-managed equity mutual funds: funds with worse before-fee performance charge higher fees. We then conduct a series of robustness checks and find that the apparently anomalous fee-performance relation survives all of them. Finally, we show that this relation may be explained as the outcome of strategic fee setting by mutual funds in the presence of investors with different degrees of sensitivity to performance
peer reviewedPrevious work shows large differences in fees for S&P 500 index funds and other funds, ...
We investigate the how and why of performance fee provisions in a free contracting environment such ...
Asset pricing models introduce the challenge of testing a joint hypothesis. This thesis tests the hy...
Gruber (1996) drew attention to the puzzle that investors buy actively-managed funds even though, on...
Business connections can mitigate agency conflicts by facilitating efficient information transfers, ...
This paper demonstrates that investor sentiment explains the recent puzzle of the negative relation ...
Recent studies propose that equity mutual fund managers generally do not have ability to generate ab...
In this paper, we develop a model of the market for equity mutual funds that captures three key char...
In this paper, we develop a model of the market for equity mutual funds that captures three key char...
In this paper, we develop a model of the market for equity mutual funds that captures three key char...
Funds with performance fees have annual net risk-adjusted returns of 0.50% below other funds, a resu...
We analyze why investors chose funds with performance fees even if expected fees are higher than in ...
If there are diseconomies of scale in asset management, any predictability in mutual fund performanc...
International audienceWhy do investors buy underperforming mutual funds? To address this issue, we d...
If there are diseconomies of scale in asset management, any predictability in mutual fund performanc...
peer reviewedPrevious work shows large differences in fees for S&P 500 index funds and other funds, ...
We investigate the how and why of performance fee provisions in a free contracting environment such ...
Asset pricing models introduce the challenge of testing a joint hypothesis. This thesis tests the hy...
Gruber (1996) drew attention to the puzzle that investors buy actively-managed funds even though, on...
Business connections can mitigate agency conflicts by facilitating efficient information transfers, ...
This paper demonstrates that investor sentiment explains the recent puzzle of the negative relation ...
Recent studies propose that equity mutual fund managers generally do not have ability to generate ab...
In this paper, we develop a model of the market for equity mutual funds that captures three key char...
In this paper, we develop a model of the market for equity mutual funds that captures three key char...
In this paper, we develop a model of the market for equity mutual funds that captures three key char...
Funds with performance fees have annual net risk-adjusted returns of 0.50% below other funds, a resu...
We analyze why investors chose funds with performance fees even if expected fees are higher than in ...
If there are diseconomies of scale in asset management, any predictability in mutual fund performanc...
International audienceWhy do investors buy underperforming mutual funds? To address this issue, we d...
If there are diseconomies of scale in asset management, any predictability in mutual fund performanc...
peer reviewedPrevious work shows large differences in fees for S&P 500 index funds and other funds, ...
We investigate the how and why of performance fee provisions in a free contracting environment such ...
Asset pricing models introduce the challenge of testing a joint hypothesis. This thesis tests the hy...