| Survivorship
Bias
By Larry Swedroe
April 13, 2001 |
|
"Warning: Returns Shown Contain Biases We Are Not Required
to Report"
The above headline should be an SEC-required disclosure for advertisements
of many mutual funds. The reported returns of many fund families
and their funds are often either misrepresentations (intentional
or unintentional) of the returns earned by investors, or are at
the very least misleading representations. This is because of
biases in the data. Lets look at one of the biases for which
disclosures should be required - survivorship bias.
Funds that have poor performance are made to disappear, most
often by the fund sponsor merging a poorly performing fund into
a better performing one. Unfortunately for investors, only the
performance reporting disappears, not the poor returns.
In the most comprehensive study ever done on mutual funds, covering
the period 1962-1993, Mark Carhart found that by 1993 fully one-third
of all funds in his sample had disappeared.
(1) In 1996, 242 (5%) of the 4,555 stock funds tracked
by Lipper Analytical Services were merged or liquidated.
Lets see why survivorship bias is so important. In 1986
the then existing 586 stock funds returned 13.4%. By 1996, the
1986 performance had magically improved to 14.7%. How did this
1.4% improvement happen? Twenty four percent of the funds disappeared.
(2) As another example, for the 10-year period ending
in 1992, capital appreciation funds reported an average appreciation
of 18.08%, versus a return of only 17.52% for the S&P 500
index. Once the survivorship bias is eliminated, the returns of
all capital appreciation funds that existed during the same 10-year
period drops to 16.32%. Actual returns to investors were not only
almost 2% per annum worse then they initially appeared to be,
but they were also about 1% below the return available to investors
in S&P 500 index funds. (3)
Two other studies confirm this view. Lipper Analytical Services
found that the return of all general equity funds for the 10-year
period they studied was 15.7%. This was 1.5% below that of the
funds that existed at the end of the period (the survivors) and
almost 2% below the return of the S&P 500. (4)
The second study found that over the 15-year period ending December
1992, the annual return of all equity mutual funds was 15.6% per
annum. When you include all the funds that failed to survive the
entire period, the annual return dropped to 14.8%. The cumulative
difference in returns was 781% versus 689%. (5)
The survivorship bias problem has increased in recent years as
mutual fund families try to bury poor performance. In 1998 alone,
387 stock and bond funds were merged out of existence, an increase
of 43% over the previous year. A further 250 funds were liquidated
due to investor redemptions. In the first quarter of 1999, the
number of vanishing stock funds jumped 74%. (6)
The trend managed to accelerate even further in 2000 as 451 funds
were shut down (223) or merged out of existence (222). (7)
The following is a good illustration of the potential impact on
reported returns when funds are merged out of existence. Liberty
Financial Cos. had been experiencing a serious drain on their
assets under management. In 1999 net outflows were over $600 million.
In the first three quarters of 2000, outflows increased to over
$850 million. In an effort to stem investor defections from its
funds, on October 5, 2000 Liberty announced that it was planning
to merge out of existence 17 of its 95 stock and bond funds. The
17 funds represented $1.7 billion of investor assets. The assets
of the 17 funds were to be merged into 10 existing funds in the
Liberty family. (8) I think
it safe to assume that the funds that were merged out of existence
were the ones with the worst track records. By merging the funds
out of existence, Liberty magically made the performance statistics
of those funds disappear. The reported returns of the now merged
funds will only contain the live returns of the surviving fund.
Of course, the poor returns investors received from the defunct
fund did not disappear, they just go unreported as if they never
were experienced (it's not due to respect for the dead). Future
investors in the Liberty funds are clearly not getting the whole
story on the returns earned by investors in the Liberty family
of funds.
As you can see, while still playing within SEC rules there exists
the potential for significant distortion of both the actual returns
received by investors and also the potential for repeat performances.
Better disclosures might help, but since many investors dont
read the fine print, the public would be better served if these
practices were prohibited.
(1) Journal of Finance,
March 1997
(2) Wall Street Journal,
April 4, 1997
(3) Dow Jones Asset Management,
January/February 1998
(4) Burton G. Malkiel, A
Random Walk down Wall Street
(5) John Bogle, Bogle on
Mutual Funds
(6) Wall Street Journal,
May 10, 1999
(7) St. Louis Post-Dispatch,
February 7, 2000
(8) Ibid.
Larry Swedroe
is the author of
The Only Guide To A Winning Investment Strategy You Will Ever
Need and What
Wall Street Doesn't Want You to Know. He is also the Director
of Research and Principal for Buckingham
Asset Management, Inc. in St. Louis, Missouri. However, his
opinions and comments expressed within this column are his own,
and may not accurately reflect those of Buckingham Asset Management.