Fund Managers Adding Values? Measuring Performance without Benchmark – A Study of Indian Mutual Fund Schemes

This paper calculates the Portfolio Change Measure (PCM) developed by Grinblatt and Titman for a sample of 744 equity schemes of Indian mutual funds over a minimum period of more than 2 years and less than 11 years. PCM, based on holding of assets, is a measure which is free from ‘benchmark’ biases...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Munawar Sayyad
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Tuwhera Open Access Publisher 2020-11-01
Series:Applied Finance Letters
Online Access:https://ojs.aut.ac.nz/applied-finance-letters/article/view/250
_version_ 1811279638296526848
author Munawar Sayyad
author_facet Munawar Sayyad
author_sort Munawar Sayyad
collection DOAJ
description This paper calculates the Portfolio Change Measure (PCM) developed by Grinblatt and Titman for a sample of 744 equity schemes of Indian mutual funds over a minimum period of more than 2 years and less than 11 years. PCM, based on holding of assets, is a measure which is free from ‘benchmark’ biases arising out of usage of a ‘benchmark’ portfolio. So by using PCM as a measure, this paper, without using any benchmark, attempts to assess whether the selected mutual fund managers were able to add value and exhibit superior skills on the average and thus making a case for active fund management over a passive buy and hold strategy. Using the monthly holding statement of each individual scheme’s portfolio, rolling PCM has been calculated on a monthly basis with a rolling window of one year. The results of our analysis, supported by robustness checks, which includes time periods of pre-and post-Global Financial Crisis, shows strong evidence of active fund management adding value in the stock selection and hence in return generating process, thus justifying the possession of superior skill or superior information of fund managers at an aggregate level. Finally, using Quantile Regression we identify some characteristics of the scheme like scheme size and ownership category, which influence PCM significantly.
first_indexed 2024-04-13T00:59:17Z
format Article
id doaj.art-f7f2135db00140ef9562ecdc70e5df2e
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2253-5799
2253-5802
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-13T00:59:17Z
publishDate 2020-11-01
publisher Tuwhera Open Access Publisher
record_format Article
series Applied Finance Letters
spelling doaj.art-f7f2135db00140ef9562ecdc70e5df2e2022-12-22T03:09:32ZengTuwhera Open Access PublisherApplied Finance Letters2253-57992253-58022020-11-019SI10.24135/afl.v9i2.250Fund Managers Adding Values? Measuring Performance without Benchmark – A Study of Indian Mutual Fund SchemesMunawar Sayyad0IBS HYDERABADThis paper calculates the Portfolio Change Measure (PCM) developed by Grinblatt and Titman for a sample of 744 equity schemes of Indian mutual funds over a minimum period of more than 2 years and less than 11 years. PCM, based on holding of assets, is a measure which is free from ‘benchmark’ biases arising out of usage of a ‘benchmark’ portfolio. So by using PCM as a measure, this paper, without using any benchmark, attempts to assess whether the selected mutual fund managers were able to add value and exhibit superior skills on the average and thus making a case for active fund management over a passive buy and hold strategy. Using the monthly holding statement of each individual scheme’s portfolio, rolling PCM has been calculated on a monthly basis with a rolling window of one year. The results of our analysis, supported by robustness checks, which includes time periods of pre-and post-Global Financial Crisis, shows strong evidence of active fund management adding value in the stock selection and hence in return generating process, thus justifying the possession of superior skill or superior information of fund managers at an aggregate level. Finally, using Quantile Regression we identify some characteristics of the scheme like scheme size and ownership category, which influence PCM significantly.https://ojs.aut.ac.nz/applied-finance-letters/article/view/250
spellingShingle Munawar Sayyad
Fund Managers Adding Values? Measuring Performance without Benchmark – A Study of Indian Mutual Fund Schemes
Applied Finance Letters
title Fund Managers Adding Values? Measuring Performance without Benchmark – A Study of Indian Mutual Fund Schemes
title_full Fund Managers Adding Values? Measuring Performance without Benchmark – A Study of Indian Mutual Fund Schemes
title_fullStr Fund Managers Adding Values? Measuring Performance without Benchmark – A Study of Indian Mutual Fund Schemes
title_full_unstemmed Fund Managers Adding Values? Measuring Performance without Benchmark – A Study of Indian Mutual Fund Schemes
title_short Fund Managers Adding Values? Measuring Performance without Benchmark – A Study of Indian Mutual Fund Schemes
title_sort fund managers adding values measuring performance without benchmark a study of indian mutual fund schemes
url https://ojs.aut.ac.nz/applied-finance-letters/article/view/250
work_keys_str_mv AT munawarsayyad fundmanagersaddingvaluesmeasuringperformancewithoutbenchmarkastudyofindianmutualfundschemes