Fund Liquidation, Self-selection, and Look-ahead Bias in the Hedge Fund Industry

A wide range of empirical biases hampers hedge fund databases. In this paper we focus upon survival-related biases and disentangle look-ahead biases due to self-selection of funds and due to fund termination. Self-selection arises because funds voluntarily report their information to data vendors an...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inReview of finance Vol. 11; no. 4; pp. 605 - 632
Main Authors Verbeek, Marno, ter Horst, Jenke
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford University Press for European Finance Association 2007
SeriesReview of Finance
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Summary:A wide range of empirical biases hampers hedge fund databases. In this paper we focus upon survival-related biases and disentangle look-ahead biases due to self-selection of funds and due to fund termination. Self-selection arises because funds voluntarily report their information to data vendors and may decide to stop doing so. By extending existing methodology, we analyze persistence in hedge fund performance over the period 1994-2000, taking into account the above biases. The results show that look-ahead biases due to liquidation and self-selection enforce each other and may lead to overestimating expected returns by as much as 8% per year. Overall, the results are consistent with positive persistence in hedge fund returns at horizons of two and four quarters. Copyright 2007, Oxford University Press.
ISSN:1572-3097
1875-824X
DOI:10.1093/rof/rfm012