Research

Uncovering Hidden Costs of Mutual Fund Investing

Image of Uncovering Hidden Costs of Mutual Fund Investing

The expense ratio is one of the few reliable predictors of mutual fund return performance, and the increasing market share of low-cost index and exchange-traded funds suggests that investors use this information when making investment decisions.

However, as noted by Vanguard founder John Bogle and other prominent industry observers, the expense ratio captures only the “visible” (i.e., reported) costs of mutual funds. Funds incur a host of “invisible” costs that are less transparent to investors—most notably, the transaction costs associated with implementing changes in portfolio positions.

Analyzing portfolio holdings and transaction data for nearly 1,800 equity funds from 1995-2006, Associate Professor Roger Edelen and his co-researchers from the University of Virginia and Virginia Tech found that these invisible costs are quite high—even higher than the expense ratio on average. Moreover, they have a significant negative impact on performance.

Funds’ average annual expenditures on trading costs (i.e., aggregate trading cost) were 1.44% compared to their expense ratio of 1.19%. And there was considerably more variation in fund trading costs than in expense ratios. Their study, “Shedding Light on ‘Invisible’ Costs: Trading Costs and Mutual Fund Performance,” was published in the January/February 2013 issue of the Financial Analysts Journal.

We found a strong negative relation between aggregate trading cost and fund return performance, providing a powerful predictor of relative performance” Edelen says. “Given the power of aggregate trading cost in predicting fund performance, it would be a useful tool for investment decision makers – particularly in avoiding poor performers.”

However, direct estimates of trading costs for funds are hard to come by and difficult to quantify, says Edelen. The most widely used proxy is fund turnover, but Edelen points out that fund turnover does not take into account the differential cost of fund trades, which depends on both trade size and the liquidity of stocks traded (i.e., small cap versus large cap).

Instead, Edelen and his co-authors offer a feasible, yet powerful alternative for researchers and investors. This “position-adjusted turnover” measure is computed by multiplying each fund’s turnover by its relative position size. A fund’s relative position size is equal to its average position size (total net assets divided by number of holdings) scaled by the average position size of all funds in the same investment category.

“Relative position size identifies funds that are ‘relatively’ big compared to the markets that they trade in, and thereby captures the price impact of the fund’s trades—how much they move prices when they trade. This is the greatest component of a fund’s trading costs,” Edelen says.

Download the PDF Here

Commands

Spotlight Story

UC Davis Part-time MBA among Top 7%, Daytime MBA in Top 9%
U.S. News & World Report’s latest rankings: This marks the 18th consecutive year our MBA program has been ranked among the best in the nation.

Image of  UC Davis Part-time MBA among Top 7%, Daytime MBA in Top 9%

(Davis, CA) — The UC Davis Graduate School of Management’s full-time MBA program has been ranked among the top six percent of AACSB International-accredited programs nationwide, according to U.S. News & World Report’s latest graduate business school rankings released today.

Spotlight Story

Powerful Alumni Network
UC Davis MBAs are international business leaders, rising managers and entrepreneurs in a wide range of industries and organizations

Image of Powerful Alumni Network

Since our charter class graduated more than 25 years ago, alumni from the UC Davis Graduate School of Management have been making their presence known around the world.

Our graduates are CEOs, vice presidents, chief financial officers, chief operating officers and entrepreneurs. Around the globe, they have taken prominent roles as international business leaders in a wide range of industries and organizations.

Graduate School of Management alumni are actively involved in their communities, and they make time for mentoring, advising and assisting current students and networking with fellow graduates.

Spotlight Story

Mark Otero MBA 07 Builds Sacramento’s Coolest Company
The secret of social gaming mogul Mark Otero’s success is taking things to the extreme

Image of Mark Otero MBA 07 Builds Sacramento’s Coolest Company

The secret of Midtown Sacramento’s Facebook gaming mogul Mark Otero’s success is taking things to the extreme.