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Preferred Clearing and Post-Trade Costs

The Review of Asset Pricing Studies 2026
Abstract We study fee competition between an incumbent and entrant central counterparty (CCP) under two regimes: interoperability (trades clear at each party’s own CCP) and preferred clearing (trades clear at the incumbent unless both counterparties choose otherwise). Preferred clearing creates network effects that force the entrant to undercut aggressively, while the incumbent sustains higher fees. Fee spreads, average trading costs, and industry profits increase under preferred clearing. However, interoperability is costly because linked CCPs must post collateral against cross-CCP exposure. Interoperability improves welfare when link costs are either low or high enough that the incumbent drops fees to reduce clearing fragmentation. (JEL G11, G12, G14)

Cross-Fund Subsidization and Flow-Performance Relation

The Review of Asset Pricing Studies 2026
Abstract This paper studies how fund-family advisors use cross-fund subsidization to manipulate fund performances and maximize fund-family values, and how this activity shapes market equilibrium. The trade-off between subsidization efficiency and funds’ endogenous profit-performance convexities determines the subsidization. When the effect of profit-performance convexities dominates, advisors optimally use low-value funds to subsidize high-value funds. When the effect of subsidization efficiency dominates, advisors use liquid funds to subsidize temporarily distressed funds. The subsidization induces negative asymmetric cross-fund flow-performance sensitivities: high-value (liquid) funds’ performances strongly decrease low-value (temporarily distressed) funds’ flows, whereas low-value (temporarily distressed) funds’ performances weakly reduce high-value (liquid) funds’ flows. (JEL G11, G14, G23, D02, D83)

Prime Time for Prime Funds: Floating NAV, Intraday Redemptions, and Liquidity Risk during Crises

The Review of Asset Pricing Studies 2026
Abstract This paper provides the first systematic evidence on a recent industry innovation: money market funds offering multiple intraday NAV strikes and redemption windows. Emerging after the 2016 floating-NAV reforms, these multistrike funds hold safer, more liquid assets than traditional single-strike funds offering end-of-day redemptions, yet face substantially larger outflows during periods of market stress. Our findings point to a structural concentration of liquidity-sensitive investors in multistrike funds, revealing how fund microstructure influences run dynamics among sophisticated institutions. Despite evolving liquidity requirements, the core behavioral and structural differences we identify remain highly relevant for evaluating ongoing and future regulatory reforms

Asset Prices When Investors Underestimate Discount Rate Dynamics

The Review of Asset Pricing Studies 2026
Abstract Underestimating discount rate volatility leads to asset pricing anomalies. Using analysts’ return forecasts as proxies for subjective discount rates, I show that these forecasts exhibit systematically lower volatility than CAPM-based benchmarks, whose objective fluctuations negatively predict future returns, especially for high beta-volatility stocks. A misvaluation measure based on this underestimation significantly predicts cross-sectional CAPM alphas, while a tradable factor explains 12 prominent anomalies. These findings underscore discount rate volatility underestimation as a unifying explanation for analysts’ forecast errors and cross-sectional return predictability, linking recent evidence on aggregate subjective belief dynamics with firm-level mispricing.

Macro Financial Trends and Market Expected Returns

The Review of Asset Pricing Studies 2026 16(2), 241-282
Abstract This paper shows that trends typically used for monetary policy guidance are also effective in predicting market excess returns. Using a linear combination method across 14 economic and financial predictor variables, we find that moving-average trends outperform the variables’ current values in forecasting market returns. Incorporating neural networks further improves these predictions. Our findings underscore the importance of trends, supporting the Federal Reserve’s emphasis on integrating trends with lagged variables. When accounting for nonlinearity, we find that market return predictability is significantly greater than commonly believed. Our results are robust across both U.S. and global equity markets. JEL C52, C53, C55, C58, G17

Cheap Options Are Expensive

The Review of Asset Pricing Studies 2026 16(2), 283-326
Abstract We show that demand pressure from retail investors makes options on low-price stocks relatively expensive—delta-hedged options on low-price stocks underperform those on high-price stocks by 0.63% per week for calls and 0.36% for puts. Natural experiments corroborate this finding: options become more expensive following stock splits, options on mini indices are more expensive than those on main indices, and mini contract options are more expensive than standard options. We attribute our findings to retail investors’ preference for skewness and divergence of opinion. Limits to arbitrage and strategic quote setting by market makers contribute to, but do not fully explain, this effect. (JEL G13, G14)

Primary Capital Market Transactions and Index Funds

The Review of Asset Pricing Studies 2026 16(2), 163-202
Abstract We document how mechanical buying by CRSP-index-tracking funds 5 days post-IPO affects stock returns and IPO deal structure. Using a difference-in-differences design, we show that expected indexer demand causes Fast-Track IPOs to outperform their non-Fast-Track counterparts by over five percentage points, peaking at the index inclusion date and reverting significantly within 3 weeks. Anticipated CRSP index inclusion also affects IPO terms, with Fast-Track IPOs raising 6% more capital than their non-Fast-Track counterparts. Our findings support a proposed index rule change to eliminate a $5.8 billion “shadow tax” paid to intermediaries by index fund investors and firms raising capital through IPOs. (JEL G12, G14)

Information from Inaction: Vested Options Unexercised and Firm Performance

The Review of Asset Pricing Studies 2026 16(2), 203-240
Abstract We hypothesize that when managers do not exercise their options, they signal valuable private information. Accordingly, we construct a proxy to capture managers’ private information from their in-the-money vested options unexercised (VOU) and find that high VOU firms’ stocks are underpriced. A long-short portfolio based on VOU generates a 5% alpha annually. Additionally, we find a positive relation with subsequent operating performance. Firms with higher VOU also receive more favorable analyst recommendations and upgraded credit ratings. Firms with higher VOU are more likely to issue news releases, share repurchases, and stock splits to convey that private information to the public. (JEL G11, G14, G32, G35, G40)

Cross-Sectional Variation of Risk-targeting Option Portfolios

The Review of Asset Pricing Studies 2026 16(1), 133-161
Abstract Options contracts are listed on thousands of stocks with different numbers of contracts per stock. This paper proposes to construct four risk-targeting portfolios to consolidate information in all the option contracts on each stock. A cross-sectional regression identifies the market price of risk on each risk source for each stock at any given date. The market price of risk estimate strongly predicts the excess return of the corresponding risk-targeting portfolio. Long-short portfolio construction on the risk-targeting portfolios in proportion to the market price of risk estimates generates highly positive average excess returns per unit risk across all four risk dimensions.

Asset Growth Anomaly of Corporate Bonds: A Decomposition Analysis

The Review of Asset Pricing Studies 2026 16(1), 50-94
Abstract This study examines the relationship between corporate asset growth rates and bond performance, uncovering a strong inverse relationship between the two. Higher asset growth increases asset value, potentially offering greater protection to bondholders and leading to lower bond returns. By decomposing bond returns into initial yields and subsequent yield changes, our analysis supports this expectation and suggests that investors may overreact to asset growth, as investor sentiment significantly influences bond yields in response to it. Finally, drawing on insights from leverage-based Q-theory, we examine how stock returns respond to asset growth, accounting for its effect on bond performance. (JEL G12, G02)