Active vs. Passive Funds—An Empirical Analysis of the German Equity Market

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DOI: 10.4236/jfrm.2019.82006    4,245 Downloads   10,431 Views  Citations

ABSTRACT

The purpose of this study is to capture value created by active funds in the German investment fund market. A sample of n = 194 actively managed funds is investigated to assess relative superior or inferior performance. For each actively managed fund, percentage changes in closing share prices for various investment periods are recorded and together set against the performance of the passive market. A benchmark is created out of the arithmetic mean of four passive exchange-traded funds representing more characteristics of the market than the S & P500 or DAX. Further bench-mark comparison is conducted with generally accepted Market Research Returns, and various performance calculation measures are presented. Risk-adjusted performance results show that active funds can and do create value in terms of abnormal returns, but these are mostly offset by expenses. Regression results prevent a rejection of the null hypothesis, indicating that active funds in general do not create significant value in form of alpha.

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Fahling, E. , Steurer, E. and Sauer, S. (2019) Active vs. Passive Funds—An Empirical Analysis of the German Equity Market. Journal of Financial Risk Management, 8, 73-91. doi: 10.4236/jfrm.2019.82006.

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