Rational agents can upset asset-pricing paradigm

In contrast to the standard paradigm about momentum and reversal in markets being caused by agents reacting wrongly, new research shows that these phenomena can arise in markets with rational agents.

Dr Paul Woolley and Dr Dimitri Vayanos, are proposing a rational theory of momentum and reversal based on delegated portfolio management.

In research done for the Paul Woolley Centre for the Study of Capital Market Dysfunctionality, Woolley and Vayanos turn the standard asset-pricing paradigm on its head.

“Momentum and reversal are viewed as anomalies because they are hard to explain within the standard asset-pricing paradigm with rational agents and frictionless markets,” they say. Widespread explanations of these occurrences are behavioural, and assume that agents react incorrectly to information signals.

Woolley and Vayanos’ research shows that momentum and reversal “can arise in markets with rational agents”, and they abandon the standard paradigm by assuming that investors delegate the management of their portfolios to financial institutions, such as mutual funds and hedge funds.

Writing on “An Institutional Theory of Momentum and Reversal”, Woolley and Vayanos propose a rational theory say flows between investment funds are triggered by changes in fund managers’ efficiency, which investors see directly or infer from past performance.

Sponsored Content

“Momentum arises if fund flows exhibit inertia, and because rational prices do not fully adjust to reflect future flows,” they say. “Reversal arises because flows push prices away from fundamental values.”

Besides momentum and reversal, fund flows generate co-movement, lead-lag effects and amplification, with all effects being larger for assets with high idiosyncratic risk, while managers’ concern with commercial risk can make prices more volatile.

Ironically, managers’ efforts to protect themselves against commercial risk can have the perverse effect of making prices more volatile, and increase co-movement.

Woolley and Vayanos address the asset-pricing effect of commercial-risk management, that is of actions that managers can take to protect themselves against the risk of experiencing outflows.

“A manager concerned with commercial risk is reluctant to deviate from the market index,” they say. “The intuition in the case of asymmetric information is that a deviation subjects the manager to the risk of underperforming, relative to the market index and experiencing outflows.”

Commercial-risk concerns thus lower the prices of stocks that the active fund overweights, and raise those of underweighted stocks.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Ezra’s guide to good investment governance

Co chair of global consulting at Russell, Don Ezra, says the progress towards best practice in investment governance is painfully slow. He spoke to Amanda White about why that path is worth enduring and some principles for creating a good governance structure. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

CalPERS collaborates on enterprise risk assessment

The speed with which CalPERS can fulfil its desire to become a risk intelligent organisation has been given a reality check with discussions between the Californian fund and TIAA-CREF revealing it takes two to five years to fully implement an effective enterprise risk-management structure, and importantly a risk intelligent culture in an organisation. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored

Instos “suppress” their home country biases

Institutional investors continued to suppress home country biases and globalise equity portfolios during 2009, a year in which risk appetite returned as equity markets rallied and short-dated credit strategies thrived, according to manager search data from Mercer Investment Consulting. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Distressed opportunities spurs internal expansion at Maryland

The $35 billion Maryland State Retirement Agency will increase its internal investment team by 25 per cent as it looks to expand its coverage of market activities and take advantage of opportunities in the distressed market. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Funds must rethink global equities, says consultant

Mercer Investment Consulting has undertaken a review of global equities and is about to roll out to clients a paper which questions traditional cap-weighted benchmarks. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Short termism presents opportunities for long-term investors

There is more opportunity to capture value-added returns by focusing on the long-horizon end of the investment spectrum, than join the over-crowded short-horizon end where most investment management is conducted, according to president and chief executive of the Canadian Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB), David Denison. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Previous