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Asset Management

See the latest research, articles and faculty on the Asset Management Area of Expertise at Columbia Business School.

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Latest on Asset Management

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Asset Management Faculty

CBS Faculty Research on Asset Management

A Personal Perspective on the Future of Discretionary Asset Management

Authors
Michael Weinberg
Date
June 28, 2021
Format
Newspaper/Magazine Article
Publication
AIMA Journal

If you were to ask a discretionary investment fund manager to draw a Venn diagram of the set notation where digitalization meets discretionary investing, many would not show the sets as overlapping. Moreover, they believe that the investment world is bifurcated and the discretionary managers are independent of the quantitative. I would argue that not only are the two sets converging but that the quantitative managers pose an existential threat to the discretionary managers, or perhaps will ‘Pac-Man’-style consume the discretionary managers.

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Public Company Auditing Around the Securities Exchange Act

Authors
Thomas Bourveau, Matthias Breuer, Jeroen Koenraadt, and Robert Stoumbos
Date
June 1, 2021
Format
Working Paper

We explore the landscape of public company auditing around the introduction of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in 1934. Using a broad sample of historical annual reports spanning several decades, we document that most public companies obtained audits even before the SEC’s audit mandate, which limited the mandate’s impact on audit rates. We further document that these companies selected their auditors based on characteristics reflecting independence and competence, even before the SEC’s mandate.

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Do Mutual Funds Keep Their Promises?

Authors
Simona Abis and Anton Lines
Date
May 24, 2021
Format
Working Paper

Mutual fund prospectuses contain a wealth of qualitative information about fund strategies, yet a systematic analysis of this content is missing from the literature. We use machine learning to group together funds with similar strategy descriptions, and ask whether they act in accordance with the text. Despite weak legal recourse for investors, we find that mutual funds largely do keep their promises. We document a market-based disciplinary mechanism: when funds diverge from their group's core strategy, investors withdraw capital.

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Intermediation in the Interbank Lending Market

Authors
Ben Craig and Yiming Ma
Date
Forthcoming
Format
Journal Article

This paper studies systemic risk in the interbank market. We first establish that in the German interbank lending market, a few large banks intermediate funding flows between many smaller periphery banks. We then develop a network model in which banks trade off the costs and benefits of link formation to explain these patterns. The model is structurally estimated using banks' preferences as revealed by the observed network structure before the 2008 financial crisis.

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The Importance of Investor Heterogeneity: An Examination of the Corporate Bond Market

Authors
Jane (Jian) Li and Haiyue Yu
Date
May 10, 2021
Format
Working Paper

Corporate bond market participants are increasingly worried about liquidity. However, bid-ask spreads and other standard measures indicate liquidity has not deteriorated significantly. This paper proposes a potential reconciliation. We show the sensitivity of credit yields to bid-ask spreads increased fourfold from 2005 to 2019. We then provide a model that connects this change to the rapid growth of mutual funds in the corporate bond market. The model features heterogeneous investors with different trading needs who choose between a risk-free asset and illiquid bonds.

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How Does Household Spending Respond to an Epidemic? Consumption During the 2020 COVID-19 Pandemic

Authors
Michaela Pagel
Date
December 1, 2020
Format
Journal Article
Journal
The Review of Asset Pricing Studies

Utilizing transaction-level financial data, we explore how household consumption responded to the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. As case numbers grew and cities and states enacted shelter-in-place orders, Americans began to radically alter their typical spending across a number of major categories. In the first half of March 2020, individuals increased total spending by over 40% across a wide range of categories.

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Accounting for Intangible Assets: Suggested Solutions

Authors
Richard Barker, Andrew Lennard, Stephen Penman, and Alan Teixeira
Date
September 1, 2020
Format
Journal Article

Current accounting practice expenses many investments in intangible assets to the income statement, confusing earnings from current revenues with investments to gain future revenues. This has led to increasing calls to book those investments to the balance sheet. Drawing on the relevant research, this paper proposes solutions for the accounting for intangible assets that contrast with balance sheet recognition, and compares them to current practice and the IFRS standards that dictate practice.

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The Tail That Wags the Economy: Beliefs and Persistent Stagnation

Authors
Julian Kozlowski, Laura Veldkamp, and Venky Venkateswaran
Date
August 1, 2020
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Political Economy

The Great Recession was a deep downturn with long-lasting effects on credit, employment and output. While narratives about its causes abound, the persistence of GDP below pre-crisis trends remains puzzling. We propose a simple persistence mechanism that can be quantified and combined with existing models. Our key premise is that agents don't know the true distribution of shocks, but use data to estimate it non-parametrically. Then, transitory events, especially extreme ones, generate persistent changes in beliefs and macro outcomes.

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What Drives Anomaly Returns?

Authors
Lars Lochstoer and Paul Tetlock
Date
June 1, 2020
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Finance

We decompose the returns of five well-known anomalies into cash flow and discount rate news. Common patterns emerge across the five factor portfolios and their mean variance efficient (MVE) combination. Whereas discount rate news predominates in market returns, systematic cash flow news drives the returns of anomaly portfolios and their MVE combination with the market portfolio. Anomaly cash flow and discount rate shocks are largely uncorrelated with market cash flow and discount rate shocks and with business cycle fluctuations.

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