RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Why Do Hedge Funds Stop Reporting Performance? JF The Journal of Portfolio Management FD Institutional Investor Journals SP 119 OP 126 DO 10.3905/jpm.2007.698041 VO 34 IS 1 A1 Alex Grecu A1 Burton G. Malkiel A1 Atanu Saha YR 2007 UL https://pm-research.com/content/34/1/119.abstract AB It is well known that the disappearance of hedge funds from a database may cause biases in estimating investment returns on these funds, although there is no consensus on why hedge funds stop reporting to data-gathering services. Some studies have suggested that poor or failing funds stop reporting, while others claim that it is the better-performing funds that stop reporting because they no longer need to attract new capital. Analysis of the TASS database reveals that hedge fund returns become significantly poorer at the end of a fund's reporting life. Other analysis here applies survival time techniques to examine fund's time to failure and changes in hazard rates (probabilities of failure) over time. Larger hedge funds and better-performing funds have lower hazard rates.TOPICS: Performance measurement, style investing, statistical methods