The impact on the pricing process of costly active management and performance chasing clients
One of the necessary features of markets to produce efficient pricing is competition between information-based investors who quickly impound new information into price. However, a significant proportion of funds invested in today’s equity markets are in the hands of managers who pursue a style that...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of Economic Interaction and Coordination 2011-05, Vol.6 (1), p.61-82 |
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creator | Bird, Ron Casavecchia, Lorenzo Pellizzari, Paolo Woolley, Paul |
description | One of the necessary features of markets to produce efficient pricing is competition between information-based investors who quickly impound new information into price. However, a significant proportion of funds invested in today’s equity markets are in the hands of managers who pursue a style that utilises little or none of the available information. We simulate such a market where the funds are being managed using the following three investment styles: fundamental, momentum and index. We confirm that the major pricing anomalies that have been highlighted previously in the literature are a natural consequence of competition between managers utilising these three investment styles. More importantly, we show that this situation is unlikely to change as long as markets continue to be dominated by costly active managers with clients who pursue outperformance. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1007/s11403-010-0076-4 |
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subjects | Capital markets Computer Appl. in Social and Behavioral Sciences Economic Theory/Quantitative Economics/Mathematical Methods Economics Economics and Finance Equity funds Finance Impact analysis Investment advisors Investment policy Investors Learning Mathematical and Computational Physics Pareto optimum Performance evaluation Rationality Regular Article Stock prices Studies Theoretical |
title | The impact on the pricing process of costly active management and performance chasing clients |
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