Tracking biased weights: asset pricing implications of value-weighted indexing

Jiang, H., Vayanos, D.ORCID logo & Zheng, L. (2020). Tracking biased weights: asset pricing implications of value-weighted indexing. (Financial Markets Group Discussion Papers 823). Financial Markets Group, The London School of Economics and Political Science.
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We show theoretically and empirically that flows into index funds raise the prices of large stocks in the index disproportionately more than the prices of small stocks. Conversely, flows predict a high future return of the small-minus-large index portfolio. This finding runs counter to the CAPM, and arises when noise traders distort prices, biasing index weights. When funds tracking value-weighted indices experience inflows, they buy mainly stocks in high noise-trader demand, exacerbating the distortion. During our sample period 2000-2019, a small-minus-large portfolio of S&P500 stocks earns ten percent per year, while no size effect exists for non-index stocks.

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