Keywords
quantitative investing, accounting standards, adjustment costs
Abstract
Quantitative investing relies on stable data generating processes and limited human involvement, which could create lower flexibility in the face of changing economic conditions. In this study, we examine quantitative investors’ ability to navigate a common and material change to the financial data generating process: new accounting standards. We find that returns of quantitative mutual funds temporarily decrease following the implementation of standards that change the definition of key accounting variables. The lower performance we document is relative to more traditional “discretionary” funds that rely heavily on human skill and judgment to make day-to-day investment decisions. Our result is predictably concentrated among value funds, which rely heavily on accounting data, and absent among funds slanted towards price-based strategies, including momentum and size. When we further investigate funds’ operations, we do not find that quantitative investors change their overarching strategies in response to accounting standards, but we do observe excess portfolio turnover. Overall, our results highlight a significant adjustment cost associated with accounting regulation that could become even more significant as more investors rely on quantitative strategies.
Original Publication Citation
“The Effect of New Accounting Standards on the Performance of Quantitative Investors” (with Nicholas Guest and Elisha Yu) Journal of Accounting and Economics 2021
BYU ScholarsArchive Citation
Dyer, Travis; Guest, Nicholas; and Yu, Jia Yin (Elisha), "The Effect of New Accounting Standards on the Performance of Quantitative Investors*" (2021). Faculty Publications. 8420.
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/facpub/8420
Document Type
Peer-Reviewed Article
Publication Date
2021
Publisher
Journal of Accounting and Economics
Language
English
College
Marriott School of Business
Department
Accountancy
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