Blog - Investing Notes
May 8,
2005 – Going with the Flows
In their May 2005 paper entitled "Asset
Fire Sales (and Purchases) in Equity Markets", Joshua Coval and
Erik Stafford examine the effects on stock prices of mutual funds forced
to sell (buy) because of predictable outflows (inflows) of funds based
on their past performance. Does such forced selling and buying present
predictable opportunities for front-running? By studying mutual fund
transactions caused by capital flows from 1980 to 2003, they conclude
that:
- Funds in the bottom decile of capital flows typically
hold about 25% fewer securities than the average fund. They are roughly
twice as likely to sell, creating significant downward price pressure
in the stocks held in common by such funds.
- Funds with large inflows tend to increase their existing
positions, creating significant upward price pressure in the stocks
held in common by such funds. Extreme inflows to mutual funds are
much more common than extreme outflows.
- Flow-driven transactions by mutual funds are predictable
based on their past performance and their reported holdings. The price
effects last about two quarters, taking several more quarters to reverse.
- Flow-driven buying and selling by mutual funds is
highly related to the momentum effect in equity returns. Stocks that
mutual funds with poor past performance must sell tend to overlap
with the stocks identified as good shorts by a momentum strategy.
- Investors who provide liquidity by trading against
flow-driven transactions earn highly significant returns. An investment
strategy that sells short stocks most likely to be involved in forced
sales and buys ahead of anticipated forced purchases earns average
annual excess returns of over 15%. Most of this excess comes from
front-running inflows.
In summary, front-running the predictable effects
of unusual mutual fund inflows and outflows on stocks held in common
offers significant excess returns.
For related research, see Blog
Synthesis: Mutual Funds and Hedge Funds and Blog
Synthesis: Momentum Investing/Trading.