For the many institutional money managers and individual portfolio managers (i.e. small RIAs) who charge fees as a percent of the total assets under management, the efficient market hypothesis is really irrelevant as far as conflict of interest is concerned.
But let's just assume (for the sake of this question) that the EMH is true and that a full-service stock broker (i.e. a person who manages money and even conducts estate planning but whose fees are transactionally based) is managing money. Under this scenario, the broker has an incentive to buy INDIVIDUAL stocks and bonds and to buy and sell more frequently, but in reality, the broker (as a money manager) should be constructing diversified portfolios of both stocks and bonds and, for the most part, holding steady with the exception of a few transactions here and there to rebalance assets. Do you all see this transaction-based compensation as a conflict of interest, especially in light of "modern" portfolio theory and in the scenario of at least semi-strong EMH being true? If so, how does a broker reconcile this with his career? Should he switch careers or just try to do the best job he can with what he's got?
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at Friday, August 10, 2007 at 04:38PM by kkent.
But let's just assume (for the sake of this question) that the EMH is true and that a full-service stock broker (i.e. a person who manages money and even conducts estate planning but whose fees are transactionally based) is managing money. Under this scenario, the broker has an incentive to buy INDIVIDUAL stocks and bonds and to buy and sell more frequently, but in reality, the broker (as a money manager) should be constructing diversified portfolios of both stocks and bonds and, for the most part, holding steady with the exception of a few transactions here and there to rebalance assets. Do you all see this transaction-based compensation as a conflict of interest, especially in light of "modern" portfolio theory and in the scenario of at least semi-strong EMH being true? If so, how does a broker reconcile this with his career? Should he switch careers or just try to do the best job he can with what he's got?
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at Friday, August 10, 2007 at 04:38PM by kkent.