0% found this document useful (0 votes)
48 views17 pages

Random Walk and EMH

Download as ppt, pdf, or txt
Download as ppt, pdf, or txt
Download as ppt, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1/ 17

Random Walk and EMH

Dr Aloysius Edward J

1
Random Walk

 Random Walk: the theory that stock price


movements are unpredictable, so there is no way to
know where prices are headed
– Studies of stock price movements indicate that they do not
move in neat patterns
– This random pattern is a natural outcome of markets that
are highly efficient and respond quickly to changes in
material information
– Definition of random walk: The best prediction of the future
price is today’s price.
Efficient Market Hypothesis
 Definition
 Informational Efficiency
 Forms of Efficiency
– Weak Form
– Semi-Strong Form
– Strong Form
 Semi-Efficient Market Hypothesis
 Security Prices and Random Walks

3
Efficient Market

 Efficient Market: a market in which securities reflect


all possible information quickly and accurately
 To have an efficient market, you must have:
– Many knowledgeable investors actively analyzing and trading
stocks
– Information is widely available to all investors
– Events, such as labor strikes or accidents, tend to happen
randomly
– Investors react quickly and accurately to new information
Definition
 The efficient market hypothesis (EMH) is the
theory supporting the notion that market prices are
in fact fair
– Under the EMH, security prices fully and fairly (i.e.,
without bias) reflect all available information about the
security
– Since the 1960’s, the EMH has been perhaps the most
important paradigm in finance
– Whether markets are efficient has been extensively
researched and remains controversial

5
Efficient Market
 An efficient market is one in which the market price of
a security is an unbiased estimate of its intrinsic value.
 Note that market efficiency does not imply that the
market price equals intrinsic value at every point of
time.
 All that it says that the errors in the market prices are
unbiased.
 This means that the price can deviate from the intrinsic
value but the deviations are random and uncorrelated
with any observable variable.

6
EMH
 Informational efficiency is a measure of
how quickly and accurately the market
reacts to new information
– This is the type of efficiency with which the EMH
is concerned
– The market is informationally very efficient
 Security prices adjust rapidly and fairly accurately to
new information

7
Forms of Market Efficiency
 Eugene Fama’s original formulation of the Efficient
Market Hypothesis established three forms of market
efficiency, based on the level of information reflected in
security prices:
1. Weak form = prices reflect all past market level (price
and volume) information
2. Semi-strong form = prices also reflect all publicly
available fundamental company and economic
information
3. Strong form = prices also reflect all privately held
information that would affect the value of the company
and its securities

8
Weak Form
 Definition
 Charting
 Runs Tests

9
Definition
 The weak form of the EMH states that it is
impossible to predict future stock prices by
analyzing prices from the past
– The current price is a fair one that considers
any information contained in the past price data
– Charting techniques are of no use in predicting
stock prices

10
Definition (cont’d)
Example

Which stock is a better buy?

Stock A

Current Stock Price

Stock B

11
Definition (cont’d)
Example (cont’d)

Solution: According to the weak form of the EMH, neither


stock is a better buy, since the current price already
reflects all past information.

12
Charting
 People who study charts are technical
analysts or chartists
– Chartists look for patterns in a sequence of
stock prices
– Many chartists have a behavioral element

13
Semi-Strong Form
 The semi-strong form of the EMH states that
security prices fully reflect all publicly
available information
– e.g., past stock prices, economic reports,
brokerage firm recommendations, investment
advisory letters, etc.

14
Semi-Strong Form (cont’d)
 Academic research supports the semi-
strong form of the EMH by investigating
various corporate announcements, such as:
– Stock splits
– Cash dividends
– Stock dividends
– Examined through “event studies”
 This means investors are seldom going to
beat the market by analyzing public news

15
Strong Form
 The strong form of the EMH states that
security prices fully reflect all relevant public
and private information
 This would mean even corporate insiders
cannot make abnormal profits by using
inside information about their company
– Inside information is information not available
to the general public

16
Criticism
 The advocates of efficient market hypothesis argue
that it is not surprising that several anomalies and
puzzles have been found. When data is mined
extensively, one is bound to find a number of
patterns. Even if inefficiencies exist, it is difficult to
take advantage of them.
 The EMH, like all theories, is an imperfect and
limited description of the stock market. However, at
least for the present, there does not seem to be a
better alternative.
17

You might also like