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We model how ETFs compete and set fees. We show that ETF secondary market liquidity plays a key role in determining fees and leads to liquidity clienteles. More liquid ETFs charge higher fees in equilibrium and attract shorter horizon investors that are more sensitive to liquidity than to fees....
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Active ETFs are less liquid than their underlying portfolios. This finding, which contrasts with that for passive ETFs, is attributed to uncertainty of future holdings of active ETFs. In addition, while diversification generally reduces firm-specific information asymmetry and improves portfolio...
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A substantial amount is incurred in ETF transaction costs each year. This paper examines the performance of a vector autoregressive (VAR) model and other naïve models to time trades in 1,350 ETFs over the 2011 to 2017 period. We find varied spread savings for large and retail ETF traders by...
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Can ETFs trigger fire sales in illiquid assets? We develop and empirically examine a model where an authorized participant (AP) holds bond inventory and connects the ETF to the underlying bond market. For redemptions, the AP acts as a buffer between the two markets, holding redeemed bonds to...
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1. Indexing, ETFs and Robos - Are Stocks an Endangered Species? -- 2. How Technology is Transforming Liquidity Provision -- 3. Liquidity – A Fluid Concept from a European View -- 4. What Can Be Done to Drive Mid- and Small-Cap Liquidity? -- 5. New Approaches for Creating Liquidity -- 6....
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This paper shows that portfolio constraints have important implications for management compensation and performance evaluation. Concretely, in the presence of portfolio constraints, allowing for benchmarking can be beneficial. Benchmark design arises as an alternative effort inducement mechanism...
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