Fund Families as Delegated Monitors of Money Managers

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Embargo Date

Related Collections

Degree type

Discipline

Subject

Finance
Finance and Financial Management

Funder

Grant number

License

Copyright date

Distributor

Related resources

Contributor

Abstract

Because a money manager learns more about her skill from her management experience than outsiders can learn from her realized returns, she expects inefficiency in future contracts that condition exclusively on realized returns. A fund family that learns what the manager learns can reduce this inefficiency cost if the family is large enough. The family’s incentive is to retain any given manager regardless of her skill but, when the family has enough managers, it adds value by boosting the credibility of its retentions through the firing of others. As the number of managers grows, the efficiency loss goes to zero.

Advisor

Date Range for Data Collection (Start Date)

Date Range for Data Collection (End Date)

Digital Object Identifier

Series name and number

Publication date

2005-01-01

Journal title

Review of Financial Studies

Volume number

Issue number

Publisher

Publisher DOI

Journal Issues

Comments

Recommended citation

Collection