Ziyao Wang · 2026-05-29
A plain-English AI summary of what this paper means for investors — generated on demand from the abstract.
When redeeming open-end funds sell and natural buyers do not step in at once, some limited-capital investor must take the other side and carry the inventory until prices recover. This paper asks what return that investor requires. A continuous-time market-clearing model delivers an expected-return restriction in which the price of residual supply depends on inventory risk, trading costs, funding frictions, and the scarcity of balance sheet available to absorb it. Mapping U.S. mutual fund flows through predetermined holdings over 2003--2024, we measure one observable component of this residual supply. Forced-sale pressure predicts actual fund selling, contemporaneous price declines, and positive returns over the following one to six months. The premium roughly doubles when market-wide absorption capacity is tight, and it concentrates in stocks with thin investor bases and limited trading capacity -- precisely the cross section in which clearing the imbalance should be most costly, and a pattern that mechanical return reversal does not generate.
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AI summary generated from the paper’s public abstract via arXiv; it may miss nuance — read the source before relying on it. Thank you to arXiv for its open-access interoperability; StockTools is not affiliated with arXiv, and all rights remain with the authors. Educational only, not financial advice.