How Rational and Competitive is the Market for Mutual Funds?
58 Pages Posted: 6 Feb 2018 Last revised: 6 Jun 2019
Date Written: June 2, 2019
Abstract
To explore the rationality and competitiveness of the mutual fund industry, we analyze the alpha of active and index mutual funds from a global sample of more than 60,000 equity and fixed income funds and test the null hypothesis that alphas to investors are zero. We distinguish between institutional and retail investors since there are significant differences in management fees, economies of scale, and information asymmetries between these two groups. Using a new robust statistical test, we cannot reject our null hypothesis for the vast majority of investment categories. We find that the average active fund has less exposure to traditional risk factors, but higher sensitivity to alternative risk premia. Fund persistence and the impact of size and fees add further support to our conclusion that the mutual fund industry is highly competitive, except for US domestic funds. This set of funds is excessively overfunded compared to other fund categories.
Keywords: active investing, index investing, mutual funds, robust alpha test
JEL Classification: C12, G10, G11, G20, G23
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