Liquidity risk in the open-end fund universe.

Authors Publication date
2018
Publication type
Thesis
Summary This thesis studies the behavior of investors in open-end mutual funds and its implications for liquidity risk. The objective of this research is to help fund managers avoid the "fund run" scenario where they suddenly lose their clients. The first step of this study is to collect a new database that records investors' "micro-transactions". This allows us to analyze their behavior at the individual level and to conduct three research papers on this topic. In the first paper, we develop a self-exciting counting model that captures stylized facts of the fund flow series. From this, we show a fund liability risk that is different from the asset risk already documented in the previous literature. We also identify a contagion of liquidity shocks across different clients in the same fund. In the next chapter, we study the investment horizons of individual clients. These horizons are strongly related to investor characteristics and economic conditions. We also show that fund managers face a premature exit risk related to the shortening of their clients' investment horizons. We then observe heterogeneity among investors: long-term investors behave differently than short-term investors. Finally, in the last chapter, we focus on rebalancing activities. We find that many investors hold a portfolio containing several funds and rebalance it to keep the same asset allocation.
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