|
||||
|
||||
Performance Persistence
Stephen J. Brown NYU Stern School of Business William N. Goetzmann Yale School of Management - International Center for Finance; Harvard Business School; National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) JOURNAL OF FINANCE, Vol 50 No 2, June 1995 Abstract: We explore performance persistence in mutual funds using absolute and relative benchmarks. Our sample, largely free of survivorship bias, indicates that relative risk-adjusted performance of mutual funds persists, however persistence is mostly due to funds that lag the S&P 500. A profit analysis indicates that poor performance increases the probability of disappearance. A year-by-year decomposition of the persistence effect demonstrates that the relative performance pattern depends upon the time period observed, and it is correlated across managers. Consequently, it is due to a common strategy that is not captured by standard stylistic categories, or risk adjustment procedures.
JEL Classifications: G14 Accepted Paper SeriesDate posted: May 04, 2000 ; Last revised: April 24, 2008Suggested CitationContact Information
|
|
|||||||||||||||
© 2008 Social Science Electronic Publishing, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Terms of Use
This page was served by apollo4 in 0.094 seconds.