This study provides a new explanation for the weak sensitivity of investors' flows to poor fund performance based on fund managers' incentives to herd from career concerns. We show that a manager's decision to trade with (against) the herd decreases (increases) significantly investors' willingness to redeem capital from underperforming funds. We argue that this differential investor reaction to poor performance conditional on herding explains the lower termination risk identified among herding managers. We also find that financial intermediaries do not mitigate this sub-optimal investors' response. Our findings support the view that underperforming funds can retain larger payoffs if they herd.17 page(s
Mutual fund investors reward short run performance with large inflows. Fund managers facing strong p...
Frontier markets constitute a category of markets for which very little is known regarding the behav...
The aims of this paper are to detect evidence of institutional investor herding behaviour and examin...
We uncover a negative relation between herding behavior and skill in the mutual fund industry. Our n...
Several theories of reputation suggest that managers' incentives affect their propensity to engage i...
The effect of fund flows on the stock-picking ability of fund managers is still largely unresolved. ...
The aim of the present thesis is to examine the presence of herding behavior among Swedish fund mana...
In this study, we explored the presence of correlated investment choices (i.e., herd behaviour) amon...
This paper examines whether UK fund managers engage in herding behaviour in the stock market using t...
The paper explores the existence of herding behaviour in the US mutual funds industry by utilising t...
This paper investigates the effect of fund managers' performance evaluation on their asset allocatio...
textThis study examines several issues related to mutual fund herd behavior. First, a unifying and...
I study various aspects of mutual funds in my thesis. These are divided over four chapters. The fir...
UnrestrictedThis dissertation consists of two chapters that examine agency issues in delegated portf...
In this paper, we show that the way in which fund managers are compensated can, under plausible cond...
Mutual fund investors reward short run performance with large inflows. Fund managers facing strong p...
Frontier markets constitute a category of markets for which very little is known regarding the behav...
The aims of this paper are to detect evidence of institutional investor herding behaviour and examin...
We uncover a negative relation between herding behavior and skill in the mutual fund industry. Our n...
Several theories of reputation suggest that managers' incentives affect their propensity to engage i...
The effect of fund flows on the stock-picking ability of fund managers is still largely unresolved. ...
The aim of the present thesis is to examine the presence of herding behavior among Swedish fund mana...
In this study, we explored the presence of correlated investment choices (i.e., herd behaviour) amon...
This paper examines whether UK fund managers engage in herding behaviour in the stock market using t...
The paper explores the existence of herding behaviour in the US mutual funds industry by utilising t...
This paper investigates the effect of fund managers' performance evaluation on their asset allocatio...
textThis study examines several issues related to mutual fund herd behavior. First, a unifying and...
I study various aspects of mutual funds in my thesis. These are divided over four chapters. The fir...
UnrestrictedThis dissertation consists of two chapters that examine agency issues in delegated portf...
In this paper, we show that the way in which fund managers are compensated can, under plausible cond...
Mutual fund investors reward short run performance with large inflows. Fund managers facing strong p...
Frontier markets constitute a category of markets for which very little is known regarding the behav...
The aims of this paper are to detect evidence of institutional investor herding behaviour and examin...