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Costly Arbitrage: Evidence from Closed-End Funds
831
Citations
2
References
1996
Year
Empirical FinanceLarge DeviationsEconomicsArbitrage CostsFinancial EconomicsAsset PricingFinancial EconometricsBusinessMutual FundsAlternative InvestmentMarket ValueFinanceClosed-end FundsFinancial Mathematics
Arbitrage costs lead to large deviations of prices from fundamentals. Using a sample of closed-end funds, I find that the market value of a fund is more likely to deviate from the value of its assets (1) for funds with portfolios that are difficult to replicate, (2) for funds that pay out smaller dividends, (3) for funds with lower market values, and (4) when interest rates are high. These factors are related to the magnitude of the deviation, as opposed to the direction (i.e., whether discount or premium), and explain a quarter of cross-sectional mispricing variation. These findings are consistent with noise trader models of asset pricing.
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