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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
31

How Well Do Commodity Based ETFs Track Underlying Assets?

Neff, Tyler Wesley 08 June 2018 (has links)
Exchange Traded Funds are growing in popularity and volume, however academic literature related to their performance is limited. This study analyzes how well the CORN, WEAT, SOYB, USO, and UGA commodity ETFs track their respective futures assets during the period of January 2012 to October 2017. Tracking error in this study is evaluated through 4 approaches to measure error, bias, systematic risk, and error magnitude. Additionally, a mispricing analysis is conducted as an alternative form of error measurement Results indicate that tracking error is small on average, however CORN shows average excess returns significantly smaller than zero. The CORN ETF is returning a smaller positive value compared to the asset basket when asset basket returns are greater than zero and a larger negative value compared to the asset basket when asset basket returns are less than zero. The CORN, WEAT, USO, and UGA ETFs are found to move less aggressively than the respective asset baskets they track. While errors were small on average, large tracking errors were present across ETFs. The size of errors were found to be impacted by large price moves, as well as seasonality on a monthly and yearly level. USDA reports impacted the size of errors for CORN, WEAT and SOYB while EIA reports had no impact on error size. The mispricing analysis concluded that CORN and SOYB trade at a discount to Net Asset Value on average while WEAT trades at a premium. / Master of Science / Exchange Traded Funds are growing in popularity and volume, however academic literature related to their performance is limited. This study analyzes how well the CORN, WEAT, SOYB, USO, and UGA commodity ETFs track their respective futures assets during the period of January 2012 to October 2017. Tracking error in this study is evaluated through 4 approaches to measure error, bias, systematic risk, and error magnitude. Additionally, a mispricing analysis is conducted as an alternative form of error measurement. Results indicate that tracking error is small on average, however CORN shows average excess returns significantly smaller than zero. The CORN ETF is returning a smaller positive value compared to the asset basket when asset basket returns are greater than zero and a larger negative value compared to the asset basket when asset basket returns are less than zero. The CORN, WEAT, USO, and UGA ETFs are found to move less aggressively than the respective asset baskets they track. While errors were small on average, large tracking errors were present across ETFs. The size of errors were found to be impacted by large price moves, as well as seasonality on a monthly and yearly level. USDA reports impacted the size of errors for CORN, WEAT and SOYB while EIA reports had no impact on error size. The mispricing analysis concluded that CORN and SOYB trade at a discount to Net Asset Value on average while WEAT trades at a premium.
32

Diversifica????o internacional de investimentos com a utiliza????o de Exchange-Traded Fund e Purchasing Managers' Index

Faria J??nior, Jos?? Raymundo de 18 February 2014 (has links)
Made available in DSpace on 2015-12-03T18:33:06Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Jose_Raymundo_de_Faria_Junior.pdf: 1267452 bytes, checksum: 6a478b16fd990211249d441f2100f6b4 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2014-02-18 / The objective of this research is to propose for high income Brazilian investors a model of dynamic allocation with international diversification that uses ETFs and the PMI manufacturing index. ETFs were selected from twelve countries, including the ETF equities in Brazil, EWZ. The portfolios were created with and without the EWZ and two procedures were adopted to weight the assets: (1) maximization of the Sharpe ratio and (2) allocation based on the proportion of GDP. An alternative method of selection of assets was presented, using the PMI manufacturing index as a decision filter for the allocation of the resources. The PMI is usually published on the first business day of each month, is researched in the major countries and is one of the first, if not the first, leading indicator of the economic cycle. When the PMI signaled economic growth, the portfolio consisted of a higher proportion of equities. To evaluate the performance of the proposed portfolio, it was compared to other three global portfolios that followed classical allocation strategies, and one of these was considered a benchmark. The proposed portfolio was also compared to a benchmark created exclusively with brazilian assets. The result suggests that the use of PMI as a decision filter in an active and internationally diversified portfolio using only foreign ETFs and weighted according to the techniques of Modern Portfolio Theory presented higher total return and Generalized Sharpe Ratio than the international and brazilian benchmarks. This result suggests that Brazilian and foreign investors and managers who adopt active management of their portfolios should include PMI as one of the indicators to be observed in the allocation strategy / O objetivo desta pesquisa ?? propor para os investidores brasileiros de alta renda um modelo de aloca????o din??mica com diversifica????o internacional que utiliza ETFs e o ??ndice PMI da manufatura. Foram selecionados ETFs de doze pa??ses, incluindo o ETF de renda vari??vel do Brasil, o EWZ. Foram criadas carteiras com e sem o EWZ e adotados dois procedimentos para ponderar os ativos: (1) maximiza????o do ??ndice de Sharpe e (2) aloca????o com base na propor????o do PIB. Foi apresentado um m??todo alternativo de sele????o de ativos, utilizando o ??ndice PMI da manufatura como filtro de decis??o para a aloca????o dos recursos. O PMI ?? divulgado, em geral, no primeiro dia ??til de cada m??s, ?? pesquisado nos principais pa??ses e ?? um dos primeiros, se n??o o primeiro, indicador antecedente do ciclo econ??mico. Quando o PMI sinalizou crescimento econ??mico, a carteira foi composta por maior propor????o de ativos de renda vari??vel. Para avalia????o da performance da carteira proposta, a mesma foi comparada a outras tr??s carteiras globais que seguiram estrat??gias cl??ssicas de aloca????o, sendo que uma destas foi considerada benchmark. A carteira proposta tamb??m foi comparada a um benchmark criado com ativos exclusivamente brasileiros. O resultado obtido sugere que o uso do PMI como filtro de decis??o em uma carteira ativa e diversificada internacionalmente usando somente ETFs estrangeiros e ponderados de acordo com as t??cnicas da Moderna Teoria de Portf??lio apresentou retorno total e ??ndice de Sharpe generalizado superiores ao benchmark internacional e ao benchmark brasileiro. Este resultado sugere que os investidores e os gestores brasileiros e estrangeiros que adotam a gest??o ativa de seus portf??lios poderiam incluir o PMI como um dos indicadores a serem observados na estrat??gia de aloca????o
33

Two Essays Relating to Mutual Fund Performance

Welch, Steven J. 08 August 2007 (has links)
In two unrelated papers, we examine different aspects of mutual fund performance and other issues. In the first chapter, we look at exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and how they differ from index funds in performance and tracking error. Using daily data and a more comprehensive sample than past research, we find abnormal returns associated with the ETFs are higher than the alphas of the index funds in most cases. The results are much more prevalent in funds that follow the S&P 500 than funds that do not. When examining the tracking errors, we find index funds are able to track their indexes much better than ETFs and domestic ETFs are better than ETFs that track international indexes. In our most significant finding, we find that tracking error affects fund flow in the following period. While fund flows are generally increasing for both ETFs and index funds, funds that track their respective index better increase their net assets by a larger percentage than funds that track their index less well. In the second chapter, we look at the differences in performance and characteristics of mutual funds as they relate to the manager's gender. Using a larger sample and different techniques than have been used in the past, we find some differences in our matched comparison which suggest female managers have a lower risk tolerance than males. Females also tend to hold a higher number of assets (stocks) and fewer assets in their top 10 holdings than do male managers. In, pooled regressions, we find weak, but significant evidence that current female fund managers, when analyzed as a group, show slightly lower performance than male managers. We then analyze performance within funds over time. Our most consistent result is that when changing the composition of fund management, regardless of gender, the new management has significantly greater performance than prior management. We also find some evidence, although not conclusive, that the percentage of female managers managing a fund is negatively related to the fund's performance over time. Finally, we find the determinants of abnormal returns cannot be attributed to the fund manager's gender.
34

Portfolio Insurance Using Leveraged ETFs

George, Jeffrey 01 May 2017 (has links)
This study examines the use of leveraged exchange traded funds (LETFs) within a portfolio insurance framework to reduce exposure to downside risk. Investors have learned the importance of mitigating this risk having experienced two “once in a century” events in the last 20 years with the tech crash in the early 2000s and the financial crisis in 2008. Current portfolio insurance strategies are either option based (Leland & Rubinstein, 1976) or constant proportional portfolio insurance (CPPI), (Black & Jones, 1987). The cost of option based strategies can be quite high while a CPPI strategy requires constant rebalancing. This study combines the advantages of each by using LETFs to attain the leverage options provide, while at the same time allowing a greater percentage of the portfolio to be invested in bonds since a position in LETFs relative to a typical market index magnifies equity exposure. Thus, where a standard CPPI strategy may require 50% of the portfolio to be invested in equities, using a 3x LETF only requires approximately 16.7%. Results suggest the use of LETFs within a portfolio insurance framework result in better returns, higher Sharpe, Sortino, Omega, and cumulative prospect values while reducing Value at Risk (VaR) and Excess Shortfall below VaR. This twist on the use of LETFs will be of interest to any investor concerned with mitigating downside risk while allowing participation in increasing markets.
35

Sector Rotation Strategy Applied on the Swedish Stock Market : Do Swedish sector indices experience momentum effects?

Larsson, Mattias, Dellgren, Peter January 2009 (has links)
<p>This thesis is an empirical analysis on momentum effects on the Swedish stock exchange’s sector indicesduring the period 2001 to 2009. The momentum effect is investigated by buying previous winner andshort selling previous losers with holding and formation periods over an intermediate time period (1-12month period). Our results are not coherent with previous studies conducted on the U.S market or theworld market, instead our results indicate that the Swedish stock exchange’s sector indices experience acontrarian effect over the intermediate time period. The results are adjusted for systematic risk and aresignificant on the 5%-level. Our result show that the weak form of the efficient market hypothesis isviolated and we therefore believe that a demand exists for easy and convenient investment vehicles withsector specific exposure, which could have a positive effect on the efficiency of the market.</p>
36

Spelar storleken roll? : En studie på ETF:er och dess underliggande kapitalvärde

Lindahl, Douglas, Wallstedt, Anders January 2010 (has links)
Börshandlade fonder (ETF:er) blir alltmer populära som spar- och investeringsalternativ. Antalet ETF:er och variationen av dessa ökar stadigt. Denna studie ser på ETF:er likställda aktier (ur ett värdepappersperspektiv) och syftar till att applicera momentumstrategier på den amerikanska ETF-marknaden, likt Jegadeesh och Titman (1993), för att testa sambandet mellan ETF:ers kapitalvärde och riskjusterad överavkastning, estimerat genom Jensens alfa. Med utgångspunkt från Banz (1981) som visar på samband mellan investeringar i småbolagsaktier och högre riskjusterad avkastning (än motsvarande investeringar i stora bolags aktier). Testet har baserats på portföljer sammansatta på momentum- och contrarianstrategier för att utröna om en ETFs storlek på kapitalvärde är avgörande för en ETFs avkastning. Populationen har delats upp efter kapitalvärde i grupper om 25% största respektive 25% minsta, varefter portföljer skapats med momentumvinnare och momentumförlorare inom respektive grupp. Resultaten är mångtydiga och är i en del fall i linje med forskning som stödjer teorier om sambandet mellan lågt kapitalvärde och hög riskjusterad överavkastning. I andra fall är resultatet motsatt. Dock ger de flesta observationer inte statistisk signifikans och sambandet kan därför inte styrkas statistiskt. Resultatet tyder snarare på att ett samband mellan dessa två variabler inte föreligger.
37

Sector Rotation Strategy Applied on the Swedish Stock Market : Do Swedish sector indices experience momentum effects?

Larsson, Mattias, Dellgren, Peter January 2009 (has links)
This thesis is an empirical analysis on momentum effects on the Swedish stock exchange’s sector indicesduring the period 2001 to 2009. The momentum effect is investigated by buying previous winner andshort selling previous losers with holding and formation periods over an intermediate time period (1-12month period). Our results are not coherent with previous studies conducted on the U.S market or theworld market, instead our results indicate that the Swedish stock exchange’s sector indices experience acontrarian effect over the intermediate time period. The results are adjusted for systematic risk and aresignificant on the 5%-level. Our result show that the weak form of the efficient market hypothesis isviolated and we therefore believe that a demand exists for easy and convenient investment vehicles withsector specific exposure, which could have a positive effect on the efficiency of the market.
38

Does the Active Country Momentum Portfolio Beat the Passive Market Portfolio? : an empirical study on exchange-traded funds

Ericsson, Anton, Erickson, Anton January 2021 (has links)
The thesis examines the strategy of country momentum and is evaluated with 30 different country exchange-traded funds (ETFs) for the period 1996-2018. The empirical evaluation is designed to apply different formation- and holding periods with overlapping portfolios. The results show positive momentum returns in various periods and a few portfolios present a higher average return than the market. However, none of the portfolios is presenting any significant positive returns or alphas, meaning that the three hypotheses cannot be rejected. On the other hand, some portfolios have higher Sharpe ratios and Morningstar value than the market. Thus, meaning that the individual investor could prefer the momentum portfolio over the market despite the insignificant returns.
39

Exchange-Traded Funds: The Unknown Investment Opportunity

Leisher, Thomas Kai January 2019 (has links)
No description available.
40

Finding Profitability of Technical Trading Rules in Emerging Market Exchange Traded Funds

Hallett, Austin P. 01 January 2012 (has links)
This thesis further investigates the effectiveness of 15 variable moving average strategies that mimic the trading rules used in the study by Brock, Lakonishok, and LeBaron (1992). Instead of applying these strategies to developed markets, unique characteristics of emerging markets offer opportunity to investors that warrant further research. Before transaction costs, all 15 variable moving average strategies outperform the naïve benchmark strategy of buying and holding different emerging market ETF's over the volatile period of 858 trading days. However, the variable moving averages perform poorly in the "bubble" market cycle. In fact, sell signals become more unprofitable than buy signals are profitable. Furthermore, variations of 4 of 5 variable moving average strategies demonstrate significant prospects of returning consistent abnormal returns after adjusting for transaction costs and risk.

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