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CHAPTER NINE

CHAPTER NINE. MARKET EFFICIENCY. © 2001 South-Western College Publishing . The Efficient Market Hypothesis. Types of Efficiency. Operational efficiency is a measure of how well things function in terms of speed of execution and accuracy. Informational efficiency is a measure of how

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CHAPTER NINE

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  1. CHAPTER NINE MARKET EFFICIENCY © 2001 South-Western College Publishing

  2. The Efficient Market Hypothesis Types of Efficiency • Operational efficiency is a measure of how well things function in terms of speed of execution and accuracy. • Informational efficiency is a measure of how quickly and accurately the market reacts to new information. • The efficient market hypothesis (EMH) deals with informational efficiency.

  3. This least restrictive form of the EMH states that future stock prices cannot be predicted by analyzing prices from the past. The EMH: Degrees of Informational Efficiency Weak Form Efficiency • In other words, the current stock price fully reflects any information contained in the past series of stock prices.

  4. autocorrelation tests filter rule tests Tests of Weak Form Efficiency • An autocorrelation test investigates whether security returns are related through time. A runs test, for example, measures the likelihood that a series of two variables is a random occurrence. • A filter rule is a trading rule regarding the actions to be taken when shares rise or fall in value by x%. Filter rules should not work if markets are weak form efficient.

  5. Semistrong form efficiency states that security prices reflect all publicly available information. The EMH: Degrees of Informational Efficiency Semistrong Form Efficiency • Event studies involving phenomena occurring at known points in time, such as a stock split or the announcement of corporate earnings, are frequently used in tests ofthe semistrong form of market efficiency.

  6. This most extreme version of the EMH states that security prices fully reflect all relevant public and private information. The EMH: Degrees of Informational Efficiency Strong Form Efficiency • Evidence does not support strong form EMH. Insiders can make a profit on their knowledge, and people go to jail, get fined, or get suspended from trading for doing so.

  7. The random walk idea states that news arrives randomly, not that stock prices move randomly. The Efficient Market Hypothesis • The essence of the semi-efficient market hypothesis is the notion that some stocks are priced more efficiently than others. This idea is sometimes used in support of the thesis that the market has several tiers.

  8. Anomalies • The low PE effect: Some evidence indicates that low PE stocks outperform higher PE stocks of similar risk. • Low-priced stocks: Many people believe that the price of every stock has an optimum trading range. • The small firm effect: Small firms seem to provide superior risk-adjusted returns.

  9. Anomalies • The neglected firm effect: Neglected firms seem to offer superior returns with surprising regularity. • Market Overreaction: It is observed that the market tends to overreact to extreme news. So, systematic price reversals can sometimes be predicted. • The January effect: In January, stock returns are inexplicably high, and small firms’ stocks do better than large firms’.

  10. Anomalies • The weekend effect: It is observed that • security price changes tend to be negative on Mondays and positive on the other • days of the week, with Friday being the • best of all. • The persistence of technical analysis: If the EMH is true, technical analysis should be useless. Each year however, an immense amount of literature based in varying degrees on the subject is printed.

  11. Final thoughts From the individualinvestor’s perspective, the US capital markets are informationally and operationally quite efficient. Still, much is not yet known about asset pricing, resulting in a fair, but complicated financial battleground. Anomalies

  12. Review • The Efficient Market Hypothesis • Types of Efficiency • Degrees of Informational Efficiency • The Semi-Efficient Market Hypothesis • Security Prices and Random Walks

  13. Review • Anomalies • The Low PE Effect • Low-Priced Stocks • The Small Firm and Neglected Firm Effects • Market Overreaction • The January Effect • The Weekend Effect • The Persistence of Technical Analysis • Final Thoughts

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