Veronika Krepely Pool
Indiana University Bloomington
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Publication
Featured researches published by Veronika Krepely Pool.
Journal of Finance | 2009
Nicolas P. B. Bollen; Veronika Krepely Pool
We find a significant discontinuity in the pooled distribution of monthly hedge fund returns: The number of small gains far exceeds the number of small losses. The discontinuity is present in live and defunct funds, and funds of all ages, suggesting that it is not caused by database biases. The discontinuity is absent in the 3 months culminating in an audit, suggesting it is not attributable to skillful loss avoidance. The discontinuity disappears when using bimonthly returns, indicating a reversal in fund performance following small gains. This result suggests that the discontinuity is caused at least in part by temporarily overstated returns. Copyright (c) 2009 the American Finance Association.
Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis | 2008
Nicolas P. B. Bollen; Veronika Krepely Pool
We show that if true returns are independently distributed and a manager fully reports gains but delays reporting losses, then reported returns will feature conditional serial correlation. We use conditional serial correlation as a measure of conditional return smoothing. We estimate conditional serial correlation in a large sample of hedge funds. We find that the probability of observing conditional serial correlation is related to the volatility and magnitude of investor cash flows, consistent with conditional return smoothing in response to the risk of capital flight. We also present evidence that conditional serial correlation is a leading indicator of fraud.
Journal of Finance | 2013
Veronika Krepely Pool; Noah Stoffman; Scott E. Yonker
We find that socially connected fund managers have more similar holdings and trades. The overlap of funds whose managers reside in the same neighborhood is considerably higher than that of funds whose managers live in the same city but in different neighborhoods. These effects are larger when managers share a similar ethnic background, and are not explained by preferences. Valuable information is transmitted through these peer networks: a long‐short strategy composed of stocks purchased minus sold by neighboring managers delivers positive risk‐adjusted returns. Unlike prior empirical work, our tests disentangle the effects of social interactions from community effects.
Review of Financial Studies | 2012
Veronika Krepely Pool; Noah Stoffman; Scott E. Yonker
Journal of Finance | 2013
Utpal Bhattacharya; Jung Hoon Lee; Veronika Krepely Pool
Review of Financial Studies | 2012
Nicolas P. B. Bollen; Veronika Krepely Pool
Journal of Financial Markets | 2008
Veronika Krepely Pool; Hans R. Stoll; Robert E. Whaley
Journal of Finance | 2015
Veronika Krepely Pool; Noah Stoffman; Scott E. Yonker
Journal of Finance | 2016
Veronika Krepely Pool; Clemens Sialm; Irina Stefanescu
Archive | 2009
Nicolas P. B. Bollen; Veronika Krepely Pool