Do actively managed equity funds outperform their passively managed counterparts? Evidence from Indonesia, South Korea and Turkey

One important implication of the Efficient Market Hypothesis is that there is no additional value in engaging in active portfolio management processes since all stocks should be trading at their fair prices in a fully efficient market. In fact, there is a large amount of empirical evidence providing...

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Main Author: Schweers, Oliver
Format: Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2013
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/26420/
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author Schweers, Oliver
author_facet Schweers, Oliver
author_sort Schweers, Oliver
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description One important implication of the Efficient Market Hypothesis is that there is no additional value in engaging in active portfolio management processes since all stocks should be trading at their fair prices in a fully efficient market. In fact, there is a large amount of empirical evidence providing support for the validity of this implication, in particular in the US and European markets. This study examines whether superior risk-adjusted performance can be generated by active portfolio managers compared to their passive counterparts in less liquid and efficient markets such as Indonesia, South Korea and Turkey. The performance is evaluated by applying Sharpe’s ratio, Treynor’s measure and Jensen’s alpha. Irrespective of the country and the technique employed there is no evidence for the performance of active and passive investment approaches to be significantly different from each other. This conclusion holds both before and after management fees are taken into account. Moreover, the findings do not provide evidence for existence of informational advantage of domestic investment managers since there is no significant difference in the performance generated by domestic and international funds.
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spelling nottingham-264202017-10-19T13:26:59Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/26420/ Do actively managed equity funds outperform their passively managed counterparts? Evidence from Indonesia, South Korea and Turkey Schweers, Oliver One important implication of the Efficient Market Hypothesis is that there is no additional value in engaging in active portfolio management processes since all stocks should be trading at their fair prices in a fully efficient market. In fact, there is a large amount of empirical evidence providing support for the validity of this implication, in particular in the US and European markets. This study examines whether superior risk-adjusted performance can be generated by active portfolio managers compared to their passive counterparts in less liquid and efficient markets such as Indonesia, South Korea and Turkey. The performance is evaluated by applying Sharpe’s ratio, Treynor’s measure and Jensen’s alpha. Irrespective of the country and the technique employed there is no evidence for the performance of active and passive investment approaches to be significantly different from each other. This conclusion holds both before and after management fees are taken into account. Moreover, the findings do not provide evidence for existence of informational advantage of domestic investment managers since there is no significant difference in the performance generated by domestic and international funds. 2013-09-20 Dissertation (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/26420/1/Dissertation.pdf Schweers, Oliver (2013) Do actively managed equity funds outperform their passively managed counterparts? Evidence from Indonesia, South Korea and Turkey. [Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)] (Unpublished)
spellingShingle Schweers, Oliver
Do actively managed equity funds outperform their passively managed counterparts? Evidence from Indonesia, South Korea and Turkey
title Do actively managed equity funds outperform their passively managed counterparts? Evidence from Indonesia, South Korea and Turkey
title_full Do actively managed equity funds outperform their passively managed counterparts? Evidence from Indonesia, South Korea and Turkey
title_fullStr Do actively managed equity funds outperform their passively managed counterparts? Evidence from Indonesia, South Korea and Turkey
title_full_unstemmed Do actively managed equity funds outperform their passively managed counterparts? Evidence from Indonesia, South Korea and Turkey
title_short Do actively managed equity funds outperform their passively managed counterparts? Evidence from Indonesia, South Korea and Turkey
title_sort do actively managed equity funds outperform their passively managed counterparts? evidence from indonesia, south korea and turkey
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/26420/