Mutual Funds’ Performance Sensitivity to Funds’ Attributes. Case Study: Saudi Mutual Funds

This study contributes to the academic literature on faith-based mutual funds, by offering a comparative investigation of Islamic vs. conventional funds’ performance sensitivity to changes in a list of seventeen relevant funds’ attributes, all in the context of the Saudi market. The performance meas...

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Main Authors: Karim Soussou, Abdelwahed Omri
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Academic Research and Publishing UG 2022-12-01
Series:Financial Markets, Institutions and Risks
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Online Access:https://armgpublishing.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/FMIR_4_2022_3.pdf
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author Karim Soussou
Abdelwahed Omri
author_facet Karim Soussou
Abdelwahed Omri
author_sort Karim Soussou
collection DOAJ
description This study contributes to the academic literature on faith-based mutual funds, by offering a comparative investigation of Islamic vs. conventional funds’ performance sensitivity to changes in a list of seventeen relevant funds’ attributes, all in the context of the Saudi market. The performance measures investigated are the excess return, selectivity and timing. The study took place from 2011 to 2015, with a sample of 200 Active Saudi funds, 137 Islamic and 63 conventional. Findings indicated that fund size, management fees, expense ratio cash and price-earnings ratio were irrelevant to both Islamic and conventional fund performances. In addition, we noticed similarities in both Islamic and conventional funds’ performances sensitivities towards turnover, unsystematic risk, investment target, past performance, age and management tenure. They however react differently towards a change in the price-to-book ratio. On the other hand, fund systematic risk, cashflow-to-book ratio and faith factors are exclusively relevant to Islamic funds, while fund growth and objective only affect conventional fund performance. Finally, selectivity and timing appear to be mutually exclusive, suggesting management specialization. This work appears to be the first comparative analysis of its kind. A larger, multi-regional sample, and a longer study period will provide better insights.
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series Financial Markets, Institutions and Risks
spelling doaj-art-a54ff73578b94cfb92d3c6b84656cde72025-08-20T03:08:48ZengAcademic Research and Publishing UGFinancial Markets, Institutions and Risks2521-12502521-12422022-12-0164325010.61093/fmir.6(4).32-50.2022Mutual Funds’ Performance Sensitivity to Funds’ Attributes. Case Study: Saudi Mutual FundsKarim Soussou0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5277-3828Abdelwahed Omri1https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3012-287XDr., Assistant Professor in Finance, Tunis Business School, University of Tunis, TunisiaDr., Professor in Finance, Research Laboratory Director GEF2A, High Institute of Management University of Tunis, TunisiaThis study contributes to the academic literature on faith-based mutual funds, by offering a comparative investigation of Islamic vs. conventional funds’ performance sensitivity to changes in a list of seventeen relevant funds’ attributes, all in the context of the Saudi market. The performance measures investigated are the excess return, selectivity and timing. The study took place from 2011 to 2015, with a sample of 200 Active Saudi funds, 137 Islamic and 63 conventional. Findings indicated that fund size, management fees, expense ratio cash and price-earnings ratio were irrelevant to both Islamic and conventional fund performances. In addition, we noticed similarities in both Islamic and conventional funds’ performances sensitivities towards turnover, unsystematic risk, investment target, past performance, age and management tenure. They however react differently towards a change in the price-to-book ratio. On the other hand, fund systematic risk, cashflow-to-book ratio and faith factors are exclusively relevant to Islamic funds, while fund growth and objective only affect conventional fund performance. Finally, selectivity and timing appear to be mutually exclusive, suggesting management specialization. This work appears to be the first comparative analysis of its kind. A larger, multi-regional sample, and a longer study period will provide better insights.https://armgpublishing.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/FMIR_4_2022_3.pdfmutual fundsperformanceexcess returnselectivitytimingattributes
spellingShingle Karim Soussou
Abdelwahed Omri
Mutual Funds’ Performance Sensitivity to Funds’ Attributes. Case Study: Saudi Mutual Funds
Financial Markets, Institutions and Risks
mutual funds
performance
excess return
selectivity
timing
attributes
title Mutual Funds’ Performance Sensitivity to Funds’ Attributes. Case Study: Saudi Mutual Funds
title_full Mutual Funds’ Performance Sensitivity to Funds’ Attributes. Case Study: Saudi Mutual Funds
title_fullStr Mutual Funds’ Performance Sensitivity to Funds’ Attributes. Case Study: Saudi Mutual Funds
title_full_unstemmed Mutual Funds’ Performance Sensitivity to Funds’ Attributes. Case Study: Saudi Mutual Funds
title_short Mutual Funds’ Performance Sensitivity to Funds’ Attributes. Case Study: Saudi Mutual Funds
title_sort mutual funds performance sensitivity to funds attributes case study saudi mutual funds
topic mutual funds
performance
excess return
selectivity
timing
attributes
url https://armgpublishing.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/FMIR_4_2022_3.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT karimsoussou mutualfundsperformancesensitivitytofundsattributescasestudysaudimutualfunds
AT abdelwahedomri mutualfundsperformancesensitivitytofundsattributescasestudysaudimutualfunds