Competition in the mutual fund industry

evidence and impications [sic] for policy

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Competition in the mutual fund industry
John C. Coates
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Last edited by MARC Bot
May 28, 2023 | History

Competition in the mutual fund industry

evidence and impications [sic] for policy

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"Since 1960 the mutual fund industry has grown from 160 funds and $18 billion in assets under management to over 8,000 funds with $10.4 trillion in assets. Yet critics, including Yale Chief Investment Officer David Swensen, Vanguard founder Jack Bogle, and New York Governor Eliot Spitzer, call for more fund regulation, claiming that competition has not protected investors from excessive fees. Starting in 2003, the number of class action suits against fund advisors increased sharply, and, consistent with critics' views, some courts have excluded or treated skeptically evidence of competition and comparable fees of other funds. Skepticism about fund competition dates to the 1960s, when the SEC accepted the view that market forces fail to constrain advisory fees, in part because fund boards rarely fire advisors. In this article, we show that economic theory, empirical evidence, and careful analysis of the laws and institutions that shape mutual funds refute this view. Fund critics overlook the most salient characteristic of a mutual fund, redeemable shares. While boards rarely fire advisors, fund investors may fire advisors at any time by redeeming shares and switching into other investments. Industry concentration is low, new entry is common, barriers to entry are low, and empirical studies -- including new evidence presented in this article -- show higher advisory fees significantly reduce fund market shares, and so constrain fees. Fund performance is consistent with competition exerting a strong disciplinary force on funds and fees. Our findings lead us to reject the critics' views in favor of the legal framework established by ʹ36(b) of the Investment Company Act and the lead case interpreting that law (the Gartenberg decision), while suggesting Gartenberg is best interpreted to allow the introduction of evidence regarding competition between funds"--John M. Olin Center for Law, Economics, and Business web site.

Publish Date
Publisher
Harvard Law School
Language
English
Pages
61

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Book Details


Edition Notes

"8/2007."

Includes bibliographical references.

"Discussion papers published since September 1997 are available for downloading free of charge from the Olin Center web site."

Published in
Cambridge, MA
Series
Discussion paper -- no. 592, Discussion paper (John M. Olin Center for Law, Economics, and Business) -- no. 592

Classifications

Library of Congress
KF209 .D57 no. 592

The Physical Object

Pagination
61, [6] p.
Number of pages
61

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL48024575M
OCLC/WorldCat
315909059

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May 28, 2023 Created by MARC Bot Imported from harvard_bibliographic_metadata record