Mutual Fund/Corporation Director Overlaps: Two Studies

Alexa Zhang Yichen
Alexa Zhang Yichen

Alexa is a rising junior (’23) from Shenzhen, China where she graduated from Shenzhen College of International Education. At Wesleyan, she studies Economics, Film Studies, and Data Analysis. She is much involved in the Wesleyan film community where she acts as producer and assistant director. She is also deeply interested in economic policy, international development, and the Chinese economy. In her free time on campus, Alexa practices meditation, Tai Chi, and volleyball.

Live Poster Session:
Zoom Link
Thursday, July 29th, 1:45-2:45 p.m. EDT

Abstract:

Mutual funds own roughly one-third of all U.S. equities, which gives them a large say over the governance of publicly traded corporations. A board of directors advises and monitors the management of each mutual fund; often one board is responsible for multiple funds managed by a single sponsor (Vanguard, Blackrock, etc.). Directors commonly serve on additional boards, including other mutual funds and/or corporations. This can result in directors who have fiduciary responsibilities to various groups of shareholders. Comprehensive data about mutual fund board membership is publicly available in mandatory N-CSR filings which are archived by the United States Securities and Exchange Commission’s EDGAR system. Data on 601 actively managed equity funds belonging to the 25 largest fund families in 2008-2019 will be analyzed, focusing on how a director’s historic and current board memberships affect the performance of their fund and/or firm. A text scraping/web crawler program extracts information about these funds from the N-CSR forms. The extracts contain extraneous information and are not in a standardized format. Therefore, the data needs to be hand cleaned to create one large dataset of mutual fund boards. This task is the focus of our Summer 2020 efforts. This data will enable research into mutual fund governance using a dataset that is larger and more complete than all other existing and available datasets of mutual fund board membership. This will advance the understanding of mutual fund and corporate governance, which may in turn lead to better governance practices that are beneficial to shareholders, markets, and the economy.

2021-QAC-Hornstein-AP-poster-v2.pptx