ABSTRACT
We investigate the relation between tax burdens and mutual fund performance from both a theoretical and an empirical perspective. The theoretical model introduces heterogeneous tax clienteles in an environment with decreasing returns to scale and shows that the equilibrium performance of mutual funds depends on the size of the tax clienteles. Our empirical results show that the performance of U.S. equity mutual funds is related to their tax burdens. We find that taxâefficient funds exhibit not only superior afterâtax performance, but also superior beforeâtax performance due to lower trading costs, favorable style exposures, and better selectivity.
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