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We find evidence that conflicts of interest are pervasive in the asset management business owned by investment banks. Using data from 1990 to 2008, we compare the alphas of mutual funds, hedge funds, and institutional funds operated by investment banks and non-bank conglomerates. We find that,...
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This paper examines the first survivorship bias-free panel dataset of equity portfolio managers who manage portfolios primarily for pension funds. We find that portfolios cease to exist at an average rate of 1.68% per quarter from June 1993 to December 2004. Survival bias is 74.1 basis points...
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This paper empirically analyzes REIT mutual funds. We show that, contrary to mostmutual fund studies, the average and median alphas (net of expenses) are positive. We also findthat time-varying positive alphas are much more likely to occur when the real asset market is performing poorly,...
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This study investigates whether family level analysis matters in the institutional money management industry by examining new portfolio openings in a large survivorship bias free sample of institutional money management families. I examine whether low-skill families that open new portfolios are...
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