Publication | Open Access
On Persistence in Mutual Fund Performance
16.7K
Citations
24
References
1997
Year
Asset AllocationPortfolio ManagementEquity PortfoliosAsset PricingCorporate Risk ManagementFund ManagementManagementMutual Fund PerformanceInvestment StrategiesAccountingSurvivor BiasInvestment StrategyFinanceFinancial EconomicsPortfolio SelectionEquity Mutual FundsBusinessPerformance PersistenceMutual FundsExplain PersistenceCorporate FinanceFinancial Risk
ABSTRACT Using a sample free of survivor bias, I demonstrate that common factors in stock returns and investment expenses almost completely explain persistence in equity mutual funds' mean and risk‐adjusted returns. Hendricks, Patel and Zeckhauser's (1993) “hot hands” result is mostly driven by the one‐year momentum effect of Jegadeesh and Titman (1993) , but individual funds do not earn higher returns from following the momentum strategy in stocks. The only significant persistence not explained is concentrated in strong underperformance by the worst‐return mutual funds. The results do not support the existence of skilled or informed mutual fund portfolio managers.
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