I just wanted to know why this is happening.
Well, the browser doesn't yet know whether your &myhtml is an entity reference you haven't finished writing yet, or just broken code it will have to fix up. For example you can say:
document.write('&eac');
document.write('ute;');
(Of course there is no entity reference like &myhtmlpotato; that you could be referring to, but the parser doesn't know that yet.)
If you let the parser know there's no more bits of entity reference coming, by document-writing something that couldn't possibly be in an entity reference, such as a <tag>, or spaces, it'll give up and decide your code was simply broken, and fix it.
Normally the end of the page would be a place where this would happen, but you don't have an end of the page, because the script isn't doing what you think it's doing.
Instead of calling document.write() during the original page loading process when it can write some content to your current page, you're calling it in the onload, by which time the document is completely loaded and you can't add to it. In this state, calling document.write() actually calls document.open() implicitly, destroying the current page and starting a new one, to which you then write ‘my&myhtml’. That new page you have opened stays open and not fully loaded until you call document.close() to tell it you aren't going to write any more to it. At that point your partial entity reference will be resolved as bad markup and fixed.