Does Fund Size Erode Mutual Fund Performance? The Role of Liquidity and Organization
University of Southern California · Princeton University · +3 more institutions
Abstract
We investigate the effect of scale on performance in the active money management industry. We first document that fund returns, both before and after fees and expenses, decline with lagged fund size, even after accounting for various performance benchmarks. We then explore a number of potential explanations for this relationship. This association is most pronounced among funds that have to invest in small and illiquid stocks, suggesting that these adverse scale effects are related to liquidity. Controlling for its size, a fund's return does not deteriorate with the size of the family that it belongs to, indicating that scale need not be bad for performance depending on how the fund is organized. Finally, using…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 30.79
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 73
Authors
4- JCJoseph ChenCorresponding
University of Southern California
- HHHarrison Hong
Princeton University
- MHMing Huang
Stanford Medicine, Stanford University
- JDJeffrey D. Kubik
Syracuse University
Topics & keywords
- Diseconomies of scale
- Income fund
- Fund administration
- Market liquidity
- Open-end fund
- Manager of managers fund
- Mutual fund
- Closed-end fund