Essays on Index Investing
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Abstract
This dissertation consists of two chapters about the economic consequences of index investing. The first chapter examines the impact of index investing on short selling. Short sellers convey
negative information to securities lenders when borrowing shares. I model how this information
generates novel interactions between institutional investors’ equilibrium lending, trading, and
governance decisions. Index funds lenders cannot trade on lending market information, allowing
them to attract more shorting demand and thereby improve price efficiency—despite increasing
lending fees. The second chapter explores how index investing impacts managerial compensation
in a moral hazard setting. With index investing, effort is reflected not only in the manager’s stock
price but also in the stock prices of all other constituent firms through the synchronized asset
demands of index investors. Thus, the prices of other constituent firms are positively related to
and contain unique information about the manager’s effort. The optimal contract puts a positive
weight on the index’s price to enhance the effort sensitivity of the manager’s pay, not to reduce
risk.
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Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2025
