English

Ponzi Funds

General Finance 2024-05-22 v1 General Economics Economics Pricing of Securities Trading and Market Microstructure

Abstract

Many active funds hold concentrated portfolios. Flow-driven trading in these securities causes price pressure, which pushes up the funds' existing positions resulting in realized returns. We decompose fund returns into a price pressure (self-inflated) and a fundamental component and show that when allocating capital across funds, investors are unable to identify whether realized returns are self-inflated or fundamental. Because investors chase self-inflated fund returns at a high frequency, even short-lived impact meaningfully affects fund flows at longer time scales. The combination of price impact and return chasing causes an endogenous feedback loop and a reallocation of wealth to early fund investors, which unravels once the price pressure reverts. We find that flows chasing self-inflated returns predict bubbles in ETFs and their subsequent crashes, and lead to a daily wealth reallocation of 500 Million from ETFs alone. We provide a simple regulatory reporting measure -- fund illiquidity -- which captures a fund's potential for self-inflated returns.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2405.12768,
  title  = {Ponzi Funds},
  author = {Philippe van der Beck and Jean-Philippe Bouchaud and Dario Villamaina},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2405.12768},
  year   = {2024}
}

Comments

30 Pages, 9 figures, 3 appendices

R2 v1 2026-06-28T16:34:16.948Z