Discontinued Positive Feedback Trading and the Decline of Return Predictability

We show that demand effects generated by institutional frictions can influence systematic return predictability patterns in stocks and mutual funds. Identification relies on a reform to the Morningstar rating system, which we show caused a structural break in style-level positive feedback trading by...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of financial and quantitative analysis 2024-11, Vol.59 (7), p.3062-3100
Hauptverfasser: Ben-David, Itzhak, Li, Jiacui, Rossi, Andrea, Song, Yang
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We show that demand effects generated by institutional frictions can influence systematic return predictability patterns in stocks and mutual funds. Identification relies on a reform to the Morningstar rating system, which we show caused a structural break in style-level positive feedback trading by mutual funds. As a result, momentum-related factors in stocks, as well as performance persistence and the “dumb money effect” in mutual funds, experienced a sharp decline. Consistent with the proposed channel, return predictability declined right after the reform, was limited to the U.S. market, and was concentrated in factors and mutual funds most exposed to the mechanism.
ISSN:0022-1090
1756-6916
DOI:10.1017/S0022109023000959