Active Share in the Swedish Premium Pension System : A Study on Mutual Fund Activity and Performance

We investigate the activity and performance of 64 Swedish registered mutual equity funds available in the Swedish Premium Pension System from October 2002 to December 2011. Fund activity is measured by applying the holdings based analysis Active Share combined with Tracking Error Volatility (TEV). A...

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Main Authors: Rönngren, Andreas, Xu, Ding
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Umeå universitet, Företagsekonomi 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-73545
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-umu-735452013-06-26T04:04:39ZActive Share in the Swedish Premium Pension System : A Study on Mutual Fund Activity and PerformanceengRönngren, AndreasXu, DingUmeå universitet, FöretagsekonomiUmeå universitet, Företagsekonomi2013Active Sharetracking error volatilitytracking errorfund performancealphaSwedish fundsfund returnmutual equity fundsCAPMthree-factor modelfour factor modelpensionSwedish pension systempremium pensionSwedish premium pension systemWe investigate the activity and performance of 64 Swedish registered mutual equity funds available in the Swedish Premium Pension System from October 2002 to December 2011. Fund activity is measured by applying the holdings based analysis Active Share combined with Tracking Error Volatility (TEV). Active Share is a relatively new measure that compares a fund’s holdings with its benchmark index constituents (Cremers & Petajisto, 2009; Petajisto, 2013). This is used as a proxy for the fund’s stock selection strategy. As a complement, TEV is used as a proxy for the factor timing strategy. Performance are measured by using Jensen’s (1968) model, Fama and French’s (1993) model and Carhart’s (1997) model. We document that Swedish funds in the Premium Pension System are relatively passive in term of Active Share compared to US funds. We attribute this finding to the relative number of stocks held by a fund compared to the market. Swedish equity funds hold a relatively larger share of the number of stocks in the Swedish market while US funds hold a relatively smaller share of the stocks in the US market. We run a panel regression analysis to test the relation between Active Share and various variables. We find that funds with higher TER fees and fewer stocks on average have higher Active Share. There are also indications that TEV is positively related to Active Share. However, the overall explanatory power of the variables is low. We attribute this as evidence that Active Share is an independent measure of fund activity. Overall, we find neutral performance for an equally weighted portfolio of all funds in the PPS. To examine the performance differences between different levels of activity, we sort funds into five portfolios based on Active Share and TEV. The results show that, given a medium-to-low TEV, funds with high Active Share significantly outperform funds with low Active Share. Furthermore, it appears that the fee rebate in the Premium Pension System is important especially for the passive funds. Without the rebate, the passive funds underperform significantly. We run a panel regression analysis on the future fund performance to test the predictive abilities of Active Share and TEV. The results indicate that Active Share does not explain future performance differences. Conversely, TEV is negatively related to future performance which can be explained by fund managers being overconfident  Student thesisinfo:eu-repo/semantics/bachelorThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-73545application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Active Share
tracking error volatility
tracking error
fund performance
alpha
Swedish funds
fund return
mutual equity funds
CAPM
three-factor model
four factor model
pension
Swedish pension system
premium pension
Swedish premium pension system
spellingShingle Active Share
tracking error volatility
tracking error
fund performance
alpha
Swedish funds
fund return
mutual equity funds
CAPM
three-factor model
four factor model
pension
Swedish pension system
premium pension
Swedish premium pension system
Rönngren, Andreas
Xu, Ding
Active Share in the Swedish Premium Pension System : A Study on Mutual Fund Activity and Performance
description We investigate the activity and performance of 64 Swedish registered mutual equity funds available in the Swedish Premium Pension System from October 2002 to December 2011. Fund activity is measured by applying the holdings based analysis Active Share combined with Tracking Error Volatility (TEV). Active Share is a relatively new measure that compares a fund’s holdings with its benchmark index constituents (Cremers & Petajisto, 2009; Petajisto, 2013). This is used as a proxy for the fund’s stock selection strategy. As a complement, TEV is used as a proxy for the factor timing strategy. Performance are measured by using Jensen’s (1968) model, Fama and French’s (1993) model and Carhart’s (1997) model. We document that Swedish funds in the Premium Pension System are relatively passive in term of Active Share compared to US funds. We attribute this finding to the relative number of stocks held by a fund compared to the market. Swedish equity funds hold a relatively larger share of the number of stocks in the Swedish market while US funds hold a relatively smaller share of the stocks in the US market. We run a panel regression analysis to test the relation between Active Share and various variables. We find that funds with higher TER fees and fewer stocks on average have higher Active Share. There are also indications that TEV is positively related to Active Share. However, the overall explanatory power of the variables is low. We attribute this as evidence that Active Share is an independent measure of fund activity. Overall, we find neutral performance for an equally weighted portfolio of all funds in the PPS. To examine the performance differences between different levels of activity, we sort funds into five portfolios based on Active Share and TEV. The results show that, given a medium-to-low TEV, funds with high Active Share significantly outperform funds with low Active Share. Furthermore, it appears that the fee rebate in the Premium Pension System is important especially for the passive funds. Without the rebate, the passive funds underperform significantly. We run a panel regression analysis on the future fund performance to test the predictive abilities of Active Share and TEV. The results indicate that Active Share does not explain future performance differences. Conversely, TEV is negatively related to future performance which can be explained by fund managers being overconfident 
author Rönngren, Andreas
Xu, Ding
author_facet Rönngren, Andreas
Xu, Ding
author_sort Rönngren, Andreas
title Active Share in the Swedish Premium Pension System : A Study on Mutual Fund Activity and Performance
title_short Active Share in the Swedish Premium Pension System : A Study on Mutual Fund Activity and Performance
title_full Active Share in the Swedish Premium Pension System : A Study on Mutual Fund Activity and Performance
title_fullStr Active Share in the Swedish Premium Pension System : A Study on Mutual Fund Activity and Performance
title_full_unstemmed Active Share in the Swedish Premium Pension System : A Study on Mutual Fund Activity and Performance
title_sort active share in the swedish premium pension system : a study on mutual fund activity and performance
publisher Umeå universitet, Företagsekonomi
publishDate 2013
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-73545
work_keys_str_mv AT ronngrenandreas activeshareintheswedishpremiumpensionsystemastudyonmutualfundactivityandperformance
AT xuding activeshareintheswedishpremiumpensionsystemastudyonmutualfundactivityandperformance
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