Do Investors Differentiate Return Components? Evidence from Asia Pacific Mutual Funds

The study aims at investigating determinants of fund performance and factors investors consider when assessing fund managers in Asia Pacific market over the period 2013-2018. Fund alphas are estimated using Single-index model (Jensen, 1968), four-factor model (Carhart, 1997) and seven-factor model (...

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Main Author: Nguyen, Hoang Yen Nhu
Format: Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2019
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/58345/
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author Nguyen, Hoang Yen Nhu
author_facet Nguyen, Hoang Yen Nhu
author_sort Nguyen, Hoang Yen Nhu
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description The study aims at investigating determinants of fund performance and factors investors consider when assessing fund managers in Asia Pacific market over the period 2013-2018. Fund alphas are estimated using Single-index model (Jensen, 1968), four-factor model (Carhart, 1997) and seven-factor model (Barber et al., 2016). We find that fund size, fund age and fund’s past performance persistently exhibit explanatory power on fund performance, in which past performance is the key driver. Asia Pacific funds in this period are also documented to exhibit superior performance over the market regardless of estimate models and benchmark choices. By breaking fund returns down into different components, we find that fund alpha remains the dominant factor driving fund flows, revealing the sophistication of investors to account for various return components but only relying on fund performance when determining manager skills and making investment decisions in Asia Pacific market.
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format Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
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institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
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language English
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spelling nottingham-583452022-12-07T12:41:27Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/58345/ Do Investors Differentiate Return Components? Evidence from Asia Pacific Mutual Funds Nguyen, Hoang Yen Nhu The study aims at investigating determinants of fund performance and factors investors consider when assessing fund managers in Asia Pacific market over the period 2013-2018. Fund alphas are estimated using Single-index model (Jensen, 1968), four-factor model (Carhart, 1997) and seven-factor model (Barber et al., 2016). We find that fund size, fund age and fund’s past performance persistently exhibit explanatory power on fund performance, in which past performance is the key driver. Asia Pacific funds in this period are also documented to exhibit superior performance over the market regardless of estimate models and benchmark choices. By breaking fund returns down into different components, we find that fund alpha remains the dominant factor driving fund flows, revealing the sophistication of investors to account for various return components but only relying on fund performance when determining manager skills and making investment decisions in Asia Pacific market. 2019-12-01 Dissertation (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/58345/1/14337957_N14031_Do%20Investors%20Differentiate%20Return%20Components_.pdf Nguyen, Hoang Yen Nhu (2019) Do Investors Differentiate Return Components? Evidence from Asia Pacific Mutual Funds. [Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)]
spellingShingle Nguyen, Hoang Yen Nhu
Do Investors Differentiate Return Components? Evidence from Asia Pacific Mutual Funds
title Do Investors Differentiate Return Components? Evidence from Asia Pacific Mutual Funds
title_full Do Investors Differentiate Return Components? Evidence from Asia Pacific Mutual Funds
title_fullStr Do Investors Differentiate Return Components? Evidence from Asia Pacific Mutual Funds
title_full_unstemmed Do Investors Differentiate Return Components? Evidence from Asia Pacific Mutual Funds
title_short Do Investors Differentiate Return Components? Evidence from Asia Pacific Mutual Funds
title_sort do investors differentiate return components? evidence from asia pacific mutual funds
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/58345/