Style drift occurs when a mutual fund's actual and declared investment style differs.
A mutual fund’s declared investment style can be found in the fund prospectus which investors commonly rely upon to aid their investment decisions. For most investors, they assumed that mutual fund managers will invest according to the advertised guidelines, this is however, not the case for a fund with style drift. Style drift is commonplace in today’s mutual fund industry, making no distinction between developed and developing markets according to studies in the United States by Brown and Goetzmann (1997) and in China as reported in Sina Finance.
When style drift presents in mutual fund, the investment information about the fund becomes misleading. Given that in reality, style drift is generally undetected, the information asymmetry of investment information has important consequences for fund investors seeking to maximize fund returns. Researchers such as Brown, Harlow and Zhang (2012) demonstrate that deviated fund tends to become another fund product of different risk returns profile that is not aligned with investor’s initial investment goal. This is supported by a most recent study by Chua and Tam (2020), researchers find that style drift behavior prevents fund managers from picking superior stocks to meet investors' expectation for fund performance. In the same study, Chua and Tam (2020), finds that fund managers have a tendency to use style drift to maximize compensation, which is a demonstration of agency problem in mutual fund industry.
It is widely acknowledged that style drift is a common practice particularly by active mutual funds in the financial markets.
While passive funds (often called "index funds") employ a buy and hold strategy often following an index, active funds take on an active investment approach by picking stocks that move in and out of the market.
It is therefore common for active funds to embrace different investment styles and consequently, investors of active mutual funds need to keep an eye on their fund's risks exposure since style drift can impact risk exposure.
Cette page est générée automatiquement et peut contenir des informations qui ne sont pas correctes, complètes, à jour ou pertinentes par rapport à votre recherche. Il en va de même pour toutes les autres pages de ce site. Veillez à vérifier les informations auprès des sources officielles de l'EPFL.
Investment style, is a term in investment management (and more generally, in finance), referring to a characteristic investment philosophy employed by an investor. The classification extends across asset classes - equities, bonds or financial derivatives - and within each may further weigh factors such as leverage, momentum, diversification benefits, relative value or growth prospects. Major styles include the following, but see also and . Active vs.
L'allocation d'actifs est une étape de la gestion d'actifs qui consiste à définir la part à donner à chaque catégorie de valeurs au sein d'un portefeuille d'investissement. L'allocation est généralement faite par secteur (cyclique, défensif, sensible), par profil (croissance, valeur), par géographie et/ou par classe d'actifs (actions, obligations, immobilier, matières premières, etc.) Pour déterminer l'allocation d'actifs optimale, l'investisseur recherche un équilibre entre le rendement attendu des actifs et les risques qu'ils représentent.
La gestion passive est une technique de gestion de portefeuille. Sa stratégie d'investissement trouve ses racines dans la recherche académique. Sa méthode résulte de l’observation des marchés. Elle est utilisée depuis le début des années 1970. Les progrès informatiques des années 1950 ont permis aux économistes de recueillir, d’enregistrer et d’analyser les nombreuses données des marchés boursiers. En 1964, William Sharpe a développé le modèle d'évaluation des actifs financiers.
Couvre les modèles factoriels, le choix du portefeuille, les anomalies et l’analyse de la performance des fonds communs de placement.
This article presents a portfolio construction approach that combines the hierarchical clustering of a large asset universe with the stock price momentum. On one hand, investing in high-momentum stocks enhances returns by capturing the momentum premium. On ...
Robust portfolio optimization aims to maximize the worst-case portfolio return given that the asset returns are allowed to vary within a prescribed uncertainty set. If the uncertainty set is not too large, the resulting portfolio performs well under normal ...
Using data on international equity portfolio allocations by U.S. mutual funds, we estimate a portfolio expression derived from a standard mean-variance portfolio model extended with portfolio frictions. The optimal portfolio depends on the previous month a ...