Keywords

mutual fund spillovers, flow induced price pressure, nonsystematic risk

Abstract

Securities are exposed to the return shocks of seemingly unrelated securities in common mutual fund portfolios. Shocks to firm returns mechanically affect fund returns that hold these securities, which induce investor-driven flows and rebalancing, resulting in temporary flow-induced price pressure (FIPP) on other firms in common portfolios. Instrumenting to address flow/return endogeneity, a one standard deviation increase in the FIPP corresponds to a 15-60 bps increase in daily abnormal firm returns. This pressure reverses in 5-6 days and is larger for liquid firms and for funds experiencing outflows. Failing to properly estimate this correlation implies that an investor is exposed to nonsystematic risk.

Original Publication Citation

“Portfolio Spillovers and a Limit to Diversification”

Document Type

Working Paper

Publication Date

2016

Language

English

College

Marriott School of Business

Department

Finance

University Standing at Time of Publication

Associate Professor

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