Delegated Portfolio Management and Rational Prolonged Mispricing
This paper examines how information becomes reflected in prices when investment decisions are delegated to fund managers whose tenure may be shorter than the time it takes for their private information to become public. We consider a sequence of managers, where each subsequent manager inherits the portfolio of their predecessor. We show that the inherited portfolio distorts the subsequent manager's incentive to trade on long-term information. This allows erroneous past information to persist, causing mispricing similar to a bubble. We investigate the magnitude of the mispricing. In addition, we examine endogenous information quality. In some cases, information quality increases when the manager's expected tenure decreases. Copyright 2003 by the American Finance Association.
Year of publication: |
2003
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Authors: | Goldman, Eitan ; Slezak, Steve L. |
Published in: |
Journal of Finance. - American Finance Association - AFA, ISSN 1540-6261. - Vol. 58.2003, 1, p. 283-311
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Publisher: |
American Finance Association - AFA |
Saved in:
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