INSTITUTIONAL INVESTORS AND THE DEPENDENCE ...
Document type :
Compte-rendu et recension critique d'ouvrage
Title :
INSTITUTIONAL INVESTORS AND THE DEPENDENCE STRUCTURE OF ASSET RETURNS
Author(s) :
Cont, Rama [Auteur]
Laboratoire de Probabilités et Modèles Aléatoires [LPMA]
Wagalath, Lakshithe [Auteur]
Lille économie management - UMR 9221 [LEM]
Laboratoire de Probabilités et Modèles Aléatoires [LPMA]
Wagalath, Lakshithe [Auteur]
Lille économie management - UMR 9221 [LEM]
Journal title :
International Journal of Theoretical and Applied Finance
Pages :
1650010
Publisher :
World Scientific Publishing
Publication date :
2016-03
ISSN :
0219-0249
English keyword(s) :
Liquidity
feedback effects
institutional investors
endogenous correlations
feedback effects
institutional investors
endogenous correlations
HAL domain(s) :
Sciences de l'Homme et Société/Gestion et management
English abstract : [en]
We propose a model of a financial market with multiple assets that takes into account the impact of a large institutional investor rebalancing its positions so as to maintain a fixed allocation in each asset. We show that ...
Show more >We propose a model of a financial market with multiple assets that takes into account the impact of a large institutional investor rebalancing its positions so as to maintain a fixed allocation in each asset. We show that feedback effects can lead to significant excess realized correlation between asset returns and modify the principal component structure of the (realized) correlation matrix of returns. Our study naturally links, in a quantitative manner, the properties of the realized correlation matrix — correlation between assets, eigenvectors and eigenvalues — to the sizes and trading volumes of large institutional investors. In particular, we show that even starting with uncorrelated “fundamentals”, fund rebalancing endogenously generates a correlation matrix of returns with a first eigenvector with positive components, which can be associated to the market, as observed empirically. Finally, we show that feedback effects flatten the differences between the expected returns of assets and tend to align them with the returns of the institutional investor’s portfolio, making this benchmark fund more difficult to beat, not because of its strategy but precisely because of its size and market impact.Show less >
Show more >We propose a model of a financial market with multiple assets that takes into account the impact of a large institutional investor rebalancing its positions so as to maintain a fixed allocation in each asset. We show that feedback effects can lead to significant excess realized correlation between asset returns and modify the principal component structure of the (realized) correlation matrix of returns. Our study naturally links, in a quantitative manner, the properties of the realized correlation matrix — correlation between assets, eigenvectors and eigenvalues — to the sizes and trading volumes of large institutional investors. In particular, we show that even starting with uncorrelated “fundamentals”, fund rebalancing endogenously generates a correlation matrix of returns with a first eigenvector with positive components, which can be associated to the market, as observed empirically. Finally, we show that feedback effects flatten the differences between the expected returns of assets and tend to align them with the returns of the institutional investor’s portfolio, making this benchmark fund more difficult to beat, not because of its strategy but precisely because of its size and market impact.Show less >
Language :
Anglais
Popular science :
Non
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