Ch08 Efficient Market
Ch08 Efficient Market
Ch08 Efficient Market
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What are the implications of the EMH?
Implications for investment
– Will it be possible to beat the market consistently over time?
• In efficient markets, technical trading rules should not work
Time 4
Implications for Active or Passive
Management
Active Management
– Security analysis
• Technical analysis Market timing
Passive Management
– Buy and Hold
– Index Funds
Empirical evidence
– Investing in passively managed funds such as index fund has
outperformed actively managed funds for the last several
decades.
– What does this imply?
• It is difficult to beat the market consistently over time
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EMH and Competition
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Then, do we need portfolio managers
in an efficient market?
Even if the market is efficient, there exists a
role for portfolio managers
– Find an optimal portfolio on the efficient frontier
• Two-fund separation theorem
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Types of Security Analysis
Technical Analysis
– Use prices and volume information to predict future prices
– Mainly for market timing purpose
– Related to the weak form efficiency
Fundamental Analysis
– Use economic and accounting information to predict stock prices
– Mainly for stock selection purpose
– Related to the semi-strong form efficiency
– This includes
• Economic Analysis
• Industry Analysis
• Security Analysis
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Empirical Tests of Market
Efficiency
Weak form efficiency
– Test profitability of some trading rules to see whether past price
or volume contains useful information
Semi-strong form efficiency
– Perform event studies around important announcements to see
whether public information is reflected immediately
Strong form efficiency
– Assess performance of professional managers or insiders to see
whether they have superior information unknown to public
investors
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How Tests Are Structured
Examine prices and returns over time
– Serial correlation?
– Seasonality?
– Any predictability?
Calculate abnormal returns around event windows
– Using the market model, estimate the following:
a. Rt = at + btRmt + et
Expected Return = at + btRmt
Excess Return = Actual – Expected return
= (at + btRmt + et) – (at + btRmt) = et
b. Cumulate the excess returns over event windows 10
Abnormal returns around the Event
-t 0 +t
Announcement Date
-t 0 +t 11
Tests of Weak Form EMH
Returns over short horizons
– Very short horizons (over a couple of weeks)
• Small magnitude of positive trends and reversals
– 3~12 months
• Some evidence of positive momentum
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Monthly abnormal returns on
momentum portfolios
Possible explanations?
– Time-varying risk premium vs. market inefficiency?
– Industry effect?
– Under-reaction to information? (behavioral finance)
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Cumulative monthly returns on momentum
Increase up to one-year after the portfolio formation,
and then, reverse thereafter.
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14
.
Cumulative monthly returns (%)
12
10
0
1 6 11 16 21 26 31 36 41 46 51 56
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Event Months since portfolio formation (6- month/ 6- month momentum strategy)
Tests of Semi-strong Form EMH
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Size effect (Small firm effect)
Why does the small firm effect concentrate in
January?
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Book-to-market effect
Value vs. Growth stocks – Value premium?
Fama-French 3-factor model – MKT, SMB, HML
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Post-Earnings Announcement Drift
Under-reaction to earnings announcements?
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Cumulative excess returns around stock split
Does the stock split add value to the firm?
– Information leakage prior to the event
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Tests of Strong Form EMH:
Professional Manager Performance
Some evidence of persistent positive and
negative performance of mutual funds
Potential measurement problems
– Performance depends on investment style, e.g.,
momentum, value strategies, etc.
– Could be compensation for risk
Superstar phenomenon
– Only a small portion survives
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Implications of Test Results
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Behavioral Possibilities
Forecasting Errors
Overconfidence
Regret avoidance
Loss aversion (disposition effect)
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