Not exact matches
Let's just say that the signal - to - noise ratio for investors has degraded substantially
over the yearsIn spite of the large increase in investment information relative to the past, there is little
evidence that active
managers in aggregate have improved their performance relative to passive strategies.
A lot of foreign
managers have also arrived in England
over the past few years and presence of high profile names such as Pep Guardiola, Jose Mourinho, Antonio Conte and Jurgen Klopp among others, serves as
evidence to the attracting power of the Premier League.
I went to pay a visit service
manager at Greenway and while everyone I showed fuel filter confessed it was hard to believe that filter could be one week old as it claimed last service receipt, service
manager with
evidence in hands still denied filter having
over 10,000 miles.
Proponents of passive management point to the SPIVA data as
evidence of the inability (in aggregate) of asset
managers worldwide to beat relevant passive indices
over meaningful periods of time.
The fund is very concentrated and differentiated; the Active Index (or OAI) is 23; in general when we see scores
over 18, we read it as
evidence of a truly active
manager).
There is substantial
evidence that only 1 in 10 active
managers actually beat their benmarks
over the long term (the same number as would be statistically anticipated when assuming randomness of returns.
This
evidence totally contradicts the consistent stand of the industry, articulated
over and
over again at the annual membership meetings of the Investment Company Institute, that «the interests of mutual fund
managers are directly aligned with the interests of mutual fund shareholders.»
Here's an ad arguing that skilled active
managers can outperform their benchmark
over the long term, and the «
evidence» covers an absurdly short period and uses an entirely inappropriate benchmark.
So here's an ad arguing that skilled active
managers can outperform their benchmark
over the long term, and the «
evidence» covers an absurdly short period and uses an entirely inappropriate benchmark.
So even with
over 20 years of data, we can not find conclusive
evidence of money
manager skill — or lack thereof.
The defendants refused to pay the rents
over because the prior property
manager, who had died, had been purportedly promised a portion of those rents by the plaintiffs,
evidenced by written acknowledgments.