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Review of Finance 2007 11(1):51-70; doi:10.1093/rof/rfm005
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Copyright © The Author 2007. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Finance Association.

Should smart investors buy funds with high past returns?*

Frederic Palomino1 and Harald Uhlig2

1 HEC School of Management
2 Humboldt University and CEPR

We fully characterize the equilibria in a gme between a fund manager of unknown ability who control the riskiness of his portfolio and investors who only observe realized returns. We derive two types of equilibria. The first one is such that (i) investors invest in the fund if the realized return falls within some interval, i.e., is neither too low nor too high, (ii) a good manager picks a portfolio of minimal riskiness and (iii) a bad manager picks a portfolio with higher risk, "gambling" on a lucky outcome. The second type of equilibrium is more traditional: (i) investors invest in the fund if the observed return is larger than some threshold, and (ii) good and bad managers choose the same risk level.


JEL Classification: G11, G23

* We are grateful to Alexei Goriaev and Sebastien Michenaud, for helpful research assistance, the seminar audience at INSEAD, two anonymous referees, Marco Pagano and Josef Zechner (the Editors) for helpful comments. For Harald Uhlig, this research has been supported by the SFB 649 "Economic Risk".


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