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Hedge Fund Regulation and Misreported Returns

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

33 Scopus citations

Abstract

This paper introduces a cross-country law and finance analysis of the misreporting behaviour in the hedge fund industry in terms of smoothing returns so that a fund consistently generates positive returns. We find strong evidence that international differences in hedge fund regulation are significantly associated with the propensity of fund managers to misreport monthly returns. We find a positive association between wrappers and misreporting, particularly for funds that do not have a lockup provision. Also, we find some evidence that misreporting is less common among funds in jurisdictions with minimum capitalisation requirements and restrictions on the location of key service providers. We assess the robustness of our finds to a number of specifications, including, different specifications of misreporting bin widths, subsets of the data by fund type, as well as specifications controlling for collinearity and selection effects and other robustness checks. We show misreporting significantly affects capital allocation, and calculate the wealth transfer effects of misreporting and relate this wealth transfer to differences in hedge fund regulation.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)829-857
Number of pages29
JournalEuropean Financial Management
Volume16
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2010

Keywords

  • G23
  • G24
  • G28
  • hedge funds
  • K22
  • law and finance
  • M43
  • misreported returns
  • regulation

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