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Cambridge Endowment for Research in Finance (CERF)

 

Pedro Saffi, Cambridge Judge Business School

Competition in Sub-advised Mutual Funds

We study the effects of managerial turnover and competition on U.S.

sub-advised mutual funds (MFs), using changes of sub-advisors by 426 funds from January 1995 to December 2016. Sub-advised MFs exhibit return-chasing behaviour when making turnover decisions, but these changes neither improve subsequent fund returns and risk measures nor increase future flows into the fund. Using sub-advisor turnover to change the degree of competition among sub-advisors does not affect the performance of incumbent sub-advisors.

Overall, no evidence exists that fund families' sub-advisor selection decisions benefit the performance of sub-advised MFs. Outperforming sub-advisors with larger style drift are less likely to be hired, and the more a sub-advisor deviates from its investment mandate, the more likely it is to be fired.

Project Update (SSRN) - April 2024