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The People in Your Neighborhood: Social Interactions and Mutual Fund Portfolios

 

Abstract


We find that socially connected fund managers have more similar holdings and trades. The overlap of funds whose managers reside in the same neighborhood is considerably higher than that of funds whose managers live in the same city but in different neighborhoods. These effects are larger when managers share a similar ethnic background, and are not explained by preferences. Valuable information is transmitted through these peer networks: a long-short strategy composed of stocks purchased minus sold by neighboring managers delivers positive risk-adjusted returns. Unlike prior empirical work, our tests disentangle the effects of social interactions from community effects.

 

Journal Link

 

 

The Journal of Finance, December 2015-Veronika K. Pool, Noah Stoffman, Scott E. Yonker

19.04.2100