Rethinking Asset Growth in Asset Pricing Models

Markets Becoming More Efficient: The Disappearing Index Effect

Greenwood and Sammon’s findings of a disappearing index effect provides further support for the findings of McLean and Pontiff, Does Academic Research Destroy Stock Return Predictability? 2016. Once anomalies are well recognized by the market they decline and may even disappear, though limits to arbitrage can allow them to persist. Their findings also provide support for Andrew Lo’s The Adaptive Markets Hypothesis (2004). The bottom line is that markets are becoming more efficient, raising the hurdles for active managers to generate alpha.

Accessing Private Markets: What Does It Cost?

By quantifying how non-performance-based fees dominate the cost structure, this research questions whether current fee models effectively align with investor interests, which could influence future fee arrangements and industry standards.

Should I be an ETF Advisor or Sub-Advisor?

As someone who has spent considerable time in the ETF landscape, we feel a deep sense of gratitude for the opportunity to share insights on a decision that can significantly impact aspiring ETF entrepreneurs: whether to serve as an advisor or a sub-advisor. One of my teammates, Patrick Cleary, put together a great article that sheds light on the complexities and implications associated with each role. A link to his article, "We want to launch an ETF. Should I be the ETF Advisor or Sub-Advisor?," is here.

The Hidden Cost of Index Replication

An index-tracking approach generally lacks flexibility, which detracts from performance, leaving returns on the table. Intelligent design can overcome such issues. For example, an S&P 500 Index could choose to rebalance one month ahead of the scheduled reconstitution, minimizing the impact of reconstitution. Direct index funds are already engaging in such strategies with ETFs.

DIY Trend-Following Allocations: October 2024

Current Exposures: Full exposure to domestic equities. Full exposure to international equities. Full exposure to REITs. No exposure to commodities. Full exposure to intermediate-term bonds.

Analysts set price targets using trailing P/E ratios

Trailing twelve-month P/E ratios account for 91% of the variation in analysts’ price targets. We construct a new kind of asset-pricing model around this fact and show that it explains the market response to earnings surprises.

Can Skewness Identify Future Outperforming Mutual Funds

While the skewness metric did demonstrate that it could select funds with managers skilled a security selection, the fund’s expenses and implementation meant that the fund was just about able to cover its expenses, and that was before the negative impact of active management on after-tax returns—and the finding was not statistically significant at even the 10% level of confidence.

We’ll be at the Astoria Macro Summit – October 29th

John and his team have assembled a stellar cast of characters for their inaugural Astoria Macro Summit at the Nasdaq Exchange in NYC on October 29, 2024. At a minimum, you'll see me moderate a panel with 200lb brains Cullen Roche, Corey Hoffstein, Ben Lavine, and Pankaj Patel!

The Economics of Private Equity

The paper examines key factors that influence the performance and success of private equity investments. Specifically, it focuses on the importance of manager selection, the role of LP sophistication and skill, the relationship between fund size and performance, the potential misalignment of incentives between GPs and LPs, and the benefits and risks associated with co-investment opportunities.

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