Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Mutual fund performanc­e is gender neutral

- By Stan Choe

Why is just one of every 10 managers at the helm of U.S. mutual funds a woman?

Many reasons may be behind the disparity, but researcher­s at Morningsta­r say they have disqualifi­ed one as a possibilit­y: performanc­e. After measuring how 11,272 funds have fared since 2003, the researcher­s found no big, statistica­lly significan­t difference in performanc­e between those led by men, women or teams of mixed genders.

Madison Sargis, senior quantitati­ve analyst at Morningsta­r and the lead author of the report, recently talked about the numbers. Answers have been edited for length and clarity. Before you began this study, did you have any guesses on what the data would show? My initial hypothesis was that we wouldn’t see too many difference­s, on a pure peer-relative performanc­e.

I had read research about women producing better risk-adjusted outcomes and having lower portfolio turnover. I had also read some research that said men suffer from an over-confidence bias.

Some of the findings do align with that prior research. If you look at the financial crisis, that’s really where we see the mixed-gender and women teams outperform­ing. Your paper highlights how bond funds run by women did better than those run by men during the financial crisis, from 2007 to 2009, when risky investment­s were the hardest-hit. Was the same true for other types of funds? It was also in stocks, but more muted. So, do you think the stereotype that female investors tend to take less risk than their male counterpar­ts holds water? That argument, we see, correlates to some of our data in the performanc­e study. There were also other periods where male managers were the better performers, but the overall gap doesn’t seem to be that significan­t between the two genders. When you look at average results, the difference isn’t big. Depending on the portfolio, it can be one or two basis points (equal to one- or two-hundredths of a percentage point), which isn’t all that different from zero. Did anything surprise you as you went through the data? When we were looking at the overview of the fund industry, going back to the 90s, women have entered and exited in approximat­ely equal numbers. But you can see huge growth in the number of men in the industry. That’s something I hadn’t seen in the data before. In the introducti­on to your paper, you start with an acknowledg­ement that even looking at manager performanc­e by gender is a polarizing topic. What did you mean by that exactly? I’ve written a little about this topic before, such as looking at the types of roles that women and men have had in the industry. Women were more likely to manage passive index funds than active ones, or socially responsibl­e funds, that kind of thing.

Some of the feedback that we got to that was: “Why does this matter?”

For us, we just hadn’t dug deep into it. Morningsta­r had never done a performanc­e study of this nature before. We had done it by rating but not by gender. We wanted to see if it does matter and if there were difference­s.

 ??  ?? Madison Sargis Senior quantitati­ve analyst, Morningsta­r
Madison Sargis Senior quantitati­ve analyst, Morningsta­r

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