Delegated Asset Management and Performance When Some Investors Are Unsophisticated

A. (Tassos) Malliaris, Steven Malliaris

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Households with limited financial expertise sometimes attempt to avoid investment mistakes by delegating the management of their investments to experts. However, evidence on the efficacy of delegation has been mixed. This paper contributes to understanding the question: why is the acquired expertise of asset managers a limited substitute for investors’ lack of expertise? We consider an economy with investors (who vary in sophistication) and managers (who vary in skill). Unsophisticated investors’ lack of expertise makes it hard for them to distinguish skilled managers from unskilled ones. In the equilibrium that follows, investors exert little effort when searching for managers, leading to a suboptimal composition of managerial types entering the market. When unsophisticated investors are endowed with weak signals, they attempt to time their entry and exit from the market for managers, but their actions are predictable, so performance continues to suffer.

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • Finance
  • Economics and Econometrics

Keywords

  • Delegated asset management
  • Financial risks
  • Financial advice
  • Career concerns
  • Market timing
  • Reputation

Disciplines

  • Business

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