Title of article
Institutional investors and the limits of arbitrage
Author/Authors
Lewellen، نويسنده , , Jonathan، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages
19
From page
62
To page
80
Abstract
The returns and stock holdings of institutional investors from 1980 to 2007 provide little evidence of stock-picking skill. Institutions as a whole closely mimic the market portfolio, with pre-cost returns that have nearly perfect correlation with the value-weighted index and an insignificant CAPM alpha of 0.08% quarterly. Institutions also show little tendency to bet on any of the main characteristics known to predict stock returns, such as book-to-market, momentum, or accruals. While particular groups of institutions have modest stock-picking skill relative to the CAPM, their performance is almost entirely explained by the book-to-market and momentum effects in returns. Further, no group holds a portfolio that deviates efficiently from the market portfolio.
Keywords
institutional investors , Arbitrage , Trading strategies
Journal title
Journal of Financial Economics
Serial Year
2011
Journal title
Journal of Financial Economics
Record number
2212134
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