Selection of stock funds using information that is not observable or measurable

Authors

  • Rodrigo Coccarelli Marroco do Amaral Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Instituto COPPEAD de Administração, Departamento de Finanças e Controle Gerencial, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brasil https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4137-9371
  • Ricardo Pereira Câmara Leal Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Instituto COPPEAD de Administração, Departamento de Finanças e Controle Gerencial, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brasil https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4516-9788

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/1808-057x202010610

Keywords:

return gap, fund flow, fund performance, stock funds, Brazil

Abstract

The aim of this paper is to investigate whether the flows and the future returns of stock funds are related to investors’ unobservable information. This article extends the knowledge about investment decisions regarding stock funds and considers a representation of unobservable information that until now has not been contemplated by the Brazilian literature. Understanding decisions to invest in stocks has become more important since the fall in interest rates and migration toward equity investments. The use of unobservable information for making investment decisions is important when choosing stock funds and the return gap could be added to the list of information offered to investors. The return gap measures the value added by managers in relation to the most recently disclosed complete lagged portfolio and was calculated every month for every asset in the portfolios of every fund in the sample disclosed with a three-month lag. A parsimonious sample was used of 22 actively managed funds in the period from January of 2010 to December of 2018, containing one from every one of the 22 biggest independent Brazilian managers, because it is laborious to calculate this metric. The return gap represents unobservable information about a fund. Investors that direct their capital toward stock funds with a higher historical return gap tend to obtain higher returns in out-of-sample tests, suggesting persistence of the returns of these funds and supporting the importance of unobservable information. Investors that directed their capital toward funds with lower historical return gaps could also obtain positive alphas in some cases, indicating that some managers were neglected. The fund flow results were inconclusive.

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Published

2020-12-20 — Updated on 2023-09-08

Issue

Section

Original Articles

How to Cite

Amaral, R. C. M. do, & Leal, R. P. C. (2023). Selection of stock funds using information that is not observable or measurable. Revista Contabilidade & Finanças, 32(85), 143-157. https://doi.org/10.1590/1808-057x202010610