Call For Papers
S&P Dow Jones Indices Third Annual SPIVA Index & Investment Research Awards
Submissions are now being accepted for the third
annual SPIVA Index & Investment Research Awards.
The S&P Dow Jones Indices international awards
program recognizes excellence in research on the
topic of index-related applications. The SPIVA
Awards supports researchers from around the world
that explore innovative techniques that enhance
the use of indices in the financial markets.
AWARDS: US $45,000 in total prize money (a first
prize of $30,000 and an honorable mention of
$15,000) will be awarded to individuals or teams
for the development of distinctive, high-quality
research in the use of financial market indices
for investment analysis and management. The SPIVA
Award winners will be announced in 2014.
QUALIFICATIONS: Eligible research papers are
those completed during the 24 months prior to the
submission deadline which have not been published
in a refereed journal. Working papers posted on
SSRN.com or similar sites are award eligible.
Laureates will be selected by a jury of academics and industry experts.
PAPER SUBMISSION PROCEDURE: Research should be
submitted electronically at
http://www.spdji.com/spiva-awards and must be
received by S&P Dow Jones Indices on or before
the submission deadline of November 15, 2013.
Rules governing the contest can also be found at
http://www.spdji.com/spiva-awards
TOPICS: Papers should cover topics related to the
use of financial market indices in investment
programs, products, evaluation, performance or
similar activities, which will be broadly
defined. This includes such areas as: trading and
investing in ETFs, index linked futures, options,
swaps, portfolios or funds; hedging, insuring or
managing investment risks; and index performance,
calculation, or maintenance. Research focusing on
applications of indices to investments or topics
directly relevant to investment questions is especially welcome.
Papers will be evaluated on the basis of several
criteria including: overall presentation,
accuracy, quality, completeness of the analysis
and relevance to investing with financial market
indices. Where papers make use of empirical data,
the data must be made available to the judging
panel if any member of the panel wishes to review
or replicate the analysis for purposes of
accuracy. Papers should be the original work of
the author(s) submitting the paper.
The SPIVA panel of judges comprises recognized
professionals and academics from S&P Dow Jones
Indices, New York University Stern School of
Business, Virginia Tech's Pamplin College of
Business, Evensky & Katz of Florida, and
California's Santa Clara University's Leavey School of Business.
2012 WINNERS: The SPIVA Award for first prize in
2012 went to Hao Jiang and Marno Verbeek of the
Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus
University and Yu Wang of Quantitative Indicator
Fund of IMC Asset Management for their winning
paper, "Information Content when Mutual Funds
Deviate from Benchmarks" which showed that the
consensus wisdom of active mutual fund managers,
as reflected in their average over- and
underweighting decisions relative to their
benchmark indices, contains valuable information
about future stock returns. Honorable mention
(second prize) was awarded to Jens Dick-Nielsen
of the Copenhagen Business School in Denmark for
his research paper entitled "Dealer Inventory and
the Cost of Immediacy" which highlights the
side-effects of new regulations aimed at investor
protections and containing risks.
ABOUT SPIVA: The SPIVA (Standard & Poor's Index
Versus Active) scorecard reveals quarterly
performance data for U.S. equity, international
and fixed income mutual funds benchmarked against
appropriate asset class indices. More than 3500
actively managed funds are covered in the
scorecard. Mutual fund data is derived from CRSP
Survivor-Bias-Free U.S. Mutual Fund Database.
The SPIVA methodology is designed to provide an
accurate and objective apples-to-apples
comparison of funds' performance versus their
appropriate style indices, correcting for factors
that have skewed results in previous
index-versus-active analyses in the industry.
SPIVA scorecards show both asset-weighted and
equal-weighted averages, include survivorship
bias correction to account for funds that may
have merged or been liquidated during the period
under study, and show style consistency for each
style group across different time horizons.
ABOUT S&P DOW JONES INDICES: S&P Dow Jones
Indices, a part of McGraw Hill Financial, is the
world's largest, global resource for index-based
concepts, data and research. Home to iconic
financial market indicators, such as the S&P 500
and the Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P Dow
Jones Indices has over 115 years of experience
constructing innovative and transparent solutions
that fulfill the needs of investors. More assets
are invested in products based upon our indices
than any other provider in the world. With over
830,000 indices covering a wide range of asset
classes across the globe, S&P Dow Jones Indices
LLC defines the way investors measure and trade
the markets. To learn more about our company,
please visit: http://www.spdji.com
Posted 7/10/13