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Mutual fund efficiency and tradeoffs in the production of risk and return

Michael Devaney (Department of Economics and Finance, Southeast Missouri State University, Cape Girardeau, Missouri, USA)
Thibaut Morillon (Department of Finance, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri, USA)
William Weber (Department of Economics and Finance, Southeast Missouri State University, Cape Girardeau, Missouri, USA)

Managerial Finance

ISSN: 0307-4358

Article publication date: 14 March 2016

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Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to estimate the performance of 188 mutual funds relative to the risk/return frontier accounting for the transaction costs of producing a portfolio of investments.

Design/methodology/approach

The directional output distance function is used to estimate mutual fund performance. The method allows the data to define a frontier of return and risk accounting for the transaction costs associated with securities management and production of risky returns. Proxies for the transaction costs of producing a portfolio of securities include the turnover ratio, load, expense ratio, and net asset value. The estimates of mutual fund performance are bootstrapped to account for the unknown data generating process. By comparing each mutual fund’s performance relative to the capital market line the authors determine how the fund should adjust their portfolio in regard to risk and return in order to maximize the inefficiency adjusted Sharpe ratio.

Findings

The bootstrapped estimates indicate that the average mutual fund could simultaneously expand return and contract risk by 3.2 percent if it were to operate on the efficient frontier. After projecting each mutual fund’s return and risk to the efficient frontier the authors find that a majority of the mutual funds should reduce risk to be consistent with the capital market line.

Originality/value

Many researchers have used data envelopment analysis to estimate a piecewise linear frontier of risk and return to measure mutual fund performance. To the authors’ knowledge the research is the first to use a twice-differentiable quadratic directional distance function to measure the managerial performance and risk/return tradeoff of mutual funds.

Keywords

Citation

Devaney, M., Morillon, T. and Weber, W. (2016), "Mutual fund efficiency and tradeoffs in the production of risk and return", Managerial Finance, Vol. 42 No. 3, pp. 225-243. https://doi.org/10.1108/MF-05-2015-0142

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2016, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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