Abstract

In this paper, I analyze re-pricing decisions for mutual fund management services. I derive measures of performance and price sensitivity and show that investors do not consider expense ratios simply as a negative component of expected returns: while performance sensitivity monotonically increases with past performance, price-sensitivity does not. Investors that buy top past-performers seems to be distracted by the fund previous return and pay relative little attention to expense ratios. Moreover price-sensitivity increases with fund visibility while performance sensitivity decreases, and while looking at data from 1980 to 2006 no discernible trend can be observed in the average performance sensitivity, price sensitivity strongly increases after 1990 due to the dramatic increase in the availability of mutual funds information for retail investors. Finally I show that investment companies strategically time their re-pricing decisions in order to exploit time variations in price and performance sensitivities. This paper is currently reserved to Carefin sponsors and will be made public on SSRN after a short embargo. Please visit the CAREFIN website to learn more on how to get the paper.

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