Performance and Performance Persistence of "Ethical" Unit Trusts in the UK
Gregory, Alan; Whittaker, Julie
Date: 1 November 2005
Working Paper
Publisher
University of Exeter, Xfi Centre for Finance and Investment
Abstract
Using UK style portfolios that are free of any survivorship bias we examine
performance, and persistence in the performance, of UK “ethical” or SRI funds, and
compare them to a control group of non-SRI funds. In addition, given evidence that
many UK funds which claim to be international in nature may exhibit home bias in
their ...
Using UK style portfolios that are free of any survivorship bias we examine
performance, and persistence in the performance, of UK “ethical” or SRI funds, and
compare them to a control group of non-SRI funds. In addition, given evidence that
many UK funds which claim to be international in nature may exhibit home bias in
their portfolio allocations, we propose a new measure for performance of international
funds that allows for this and show that such recognition has important implications
for the conclusions drawn on performance. We show that SRI funds have less
exposure to HML, but greater exposure to SMB and momentum factors, and that
neither SRI nor non-SRI funds exhibit significant under performance on a risk/style
adjusted basis, despite comparatively poor absolute performance. We also show that
performance appears to be time-varying, and that conclusions on performance itself
are influenced by whether a static or time varying model is employed. We then
examine persistence in fund performance and find evidence that supports persistence.
In addition, we find there are differences in performance persistence between ethical
and non-ethical funds, but conclusions on the degree of persistence and the direction
of persistence appear to depend on the performance metric chosen. However, it is
always the case that past winner “ethical” funds outperform “loser” ethical funds at 12
month horizons, such that there is evidence that “ethical” investors can enhance
investment performance by investing in past “winners” and avoiding past “losers”
Finance and Accounting
Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy
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