Essays about: "Three-Factor Model."
Showing result 1 - 5 of 111 essays containing the words Three-Factor Model..
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1. Active fund management or passive index cruising?
University essay from Göteborgs universitet/Institutionen för nationalekonomi med statistikAbstract : How should an investor pick funds to invest in? What is the best strategy, picking active or passive funds? It’s hard to navigate the fund landscape when there is ambiguous evidence and advice coming from different directions. Do fund managers outperform the market and passive funds? Do they bring something extra of value to the table in regards to their high management fees? The question seems almost age-old at this point, from dart throwing monkeys outperforming high profile fund managers to famous investors proclaiming that active fund management is dead, it’s hard to know what is really true about active versus passive fund management. READ MORE
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2. Return Differences on the Swedish Stock Market When Incorporating Different Value-Factors
University essay from Göteborgs universitet/Graduate SchoolAbstract : MSc in Finance.... READ MORE
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3. Downside risk: is downside risk being priced in the U.S. stock market?
University essay fromAbstract : This paper aims to add further research to the field of downside risk, and downside risk measures’ influence on the average returns in the U.S. stock market. READ MORE
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4. Are Women the Real Alpha Males? Gender differences through the lense of performance and risk in the Swedish mutual fund industry
University essay from Göteborgs universitet/Graduate SchoolAbstract : MSc in Accounting and Financial Management.... READ MORE
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5. The difference in risk adjusted performance between socially responsible and conventional equity mutual funds - Evidence from Sweden
University essay from Göteborgs universitet/Institutionen för nationalekonomi med statistikAbstract : This thesis aims to study the difference in risk-adjusted performance between socially responsible (SR) and conventional equity mutual funds from a Swedish perspective. The study uses mutual fund data from the time-period January 2010 to January 2020. READ MORE
