INVESTMENTS: Analysis and Management Second Canadian Edition INVESTMENTS: Analysis and Management Second Canadian Edition W. Sean Cleary Charles P. Jones.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 3 Market Efficiency
Advertisements

Market Efficiency Chapter 12
Efficient Market Hypothesis
Vicentiu Covrig 1 The Efficient Capital Markets (chapter 12 Jones)
Efficient Capital Markets
1 Efficient Market Theory Dr. Rana Singh Associate Professor
INVESTMENTS: Analysis and Management Second Canadian Edition INVESTMENTS: Analysis and Management Second Canadian Edition W. Sean Cleary Charles P. Jones.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. Efficient Market Hypothesis 1.
INVESTMENTS: Analysis and Management Second Canadian Edition INVESTMENTS: Analysis and Management Second Canadian Edition W. Sean Cleary Charles P. Jones.
Market Efficiency Chapter 10.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. The Efficient Market Hypothesis CHAPTER 8.
1 Fin 2802, Spring 10 - Tang Chapter 11: Market Efficiency Fina2802: Investments and Portfolio Analysis Spring, 2010 Dragon Tang Lecture 10 The Efficient.
Efficient Capital Markets
Chapter 10 Market Efficiency.
Market Efficiency Chapter 12. Do security prices reflect information ? Why look at market efficiency - Implications for business and corporate finance.
Chapter 10 Market Efficiency. Warren Buffet "I'd be a bum on the street with a tin cup if the markets were always efficient" ….”Observing correctly that.
Practical Investment Management
INVESTMENTS: Analysis and Management Third Canadian Edition INVESTMENTS: Analysis and Management Third Canadian Edition W. Sean Cleary Charles P. Jones.
INVESTMENTS: Analysis and Management Second Canadian Edition INVESTMENTS: Analysis and Management Second Canadian Edition W. Sean Cleary Charles P. Jones.
INVESTMENTS: Analysis and Management Second Canadian Edition INVESTMENTS: Analysis and Management Second Canadian Edition W. Sean Cleary Charles P. Jones.
Analyzing and Managing Common Stocks
CHAPTER NINE MARKET EFFICIENCY © 2001 South-Western College Publishing.
Efficient Market Hypothesis by Indrani Pramanick (44)
INVESTMENTS: Analysis and Management Second Canadian Edition INVESTMENTS: Analysis and Management Second Canadian Edition W. Sean Cleary Charles P. Jones.
INVESTMENTS: Analysis and Management Second Canadian Edition INVESTMENTS: Analysis and Management Second Canadian Edition W. Sean Cleary Charles P. Jones.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. The Efficient Market Hypothesis CHAPTER 8.
Efficient Capital Markets Objectives: What is meant by the concept that capital markets are efficient? Why should capital markets be efficient? What are.
FIN 614: Financial Management Larry Schrenk, Instructor.
© 2016 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a license.
Market Efficiency. News and Returns All news, and announcements contain anticipated and unexpected components The market prices assets based on what is.
Market Efficiency.
Market efficiency Kevin C.H. Chiang. Efficient market (Informationally) efficient market: a market in which security prices adjust fully and rapidly to.
Lecture Presentation Software to accompany Investment Analysis and Portfolio Management Seventh Edition by Frank K. Reilly & Keith C. Brown Chapter 6.
1 Efficient Capital Markets Learning Objectives What is meant by the concept that capital markets are efficient? Why should capital markets be efficient?
Technical Analysis Chapter 16
INVESTMENTS: Analysis and Management Second Canadian Edition INVESTMENTS: Analysis and Management Second Canadian Edition W. Sean Cleary Charles P. Jones.
Chapter 11 Charles P. Jones, Investments: Analysis and Management, Eleventh Edition, John Wiley & Sons
Chapter 12 Jones, Investments: Analysis and Management
Efficient Market Hypothesis EMH Presented by Inderpal Singh.
Chapter 12 The Efficient Market Hypothesis. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. Random Walk - stock prices.
COMM W. Suo Slide 1. COMM W. Suo Slide 2  Random Walk - stock price change unpredictably  Actually stock prices follow a positive trend.
INVESTMENTS: Analysis and Management Second Canadian Edition INVESTMENTS: Analysis and Management Second Canadian Edition W. Sean Cleary Charles P. Jones.
INVESTMENTS: Analysis and Management Second Canadian Edition INVESTMENTS: Analysis and Management Second Canadian Edition W. Sean Cleary Charles P. Jones.
Chapter 8 The Efficient Market Hypothesis. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. Efficient Market Hypothesis.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. Efficient Markets & The Behavioral Critique CHAPTE R 8.
Chapter 10 Market Efficiency.
The Market Hypothesis The Efficient Market Hypothesis.
Investments, 8 th edition Bodie, Kane and Marcus Slides by Susan Hine McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2005 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 12 Market Efficiency and Behavioral Finance.
CHAPTER NINE MARKET EFFICIENCY Practical Investment Management Robert A. Strong.
The Efficient Market Hypothesis. Any informarion that could be used to predict stock performance should already be reflected in stock prices. –Random.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2001 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved Market Efficiency Chapter 11.
INVESTMENTS: Analysis and Management Second Canadian Edition INVESTMENTS: Analysis and Management Second Canadian Edition W. Sean Cleary Charles P. Jones.
Market Efficiency. What is an efficient market? A market is efficient when it uses all available information to price assets.  Information is quickly.
INVESTMENTS: Analysis and Management Second Canadian Edition INVESTMENTS: Analysis and Management Second Canadian Edition W. Sean Cleary Charles P. Jones.
 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1999 INVESTMENTS Fourth Edition Bodie Kane Marcus Irwin/McGraw-Hill 12-1 Market Efficiency Chapter 12.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. Efficient Markets & The Behavioral Critique CHAPTER 8.
Chapter 10 Market Efficiency.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. A market is efficient if prices “fully ______________” available information.
Essentials of Investments © 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Fourth Edition Irwin / McGraw-Hill Bodie Kane Marcus 1 Chapter 9.
Chapter 11 Charles P. Jones, Investments: Analysis and Management, Twelfth Edition, John Wiley & Sons 11-1.
Market Efficiency Chapter 12
Common Stocks: Analysis and Strategy
Chapter 9 Market Efficiency.
Market Efficiency Chapter 12
Semistrong Form Evidence
Relative Strength Ratio of price to index or past average price over some period Ratios plotted to form graph of relative price across time Rising (falling)
Market Efficiency and Behavioral Finance
Presentation transcript:

INVESTMENTS: Analysis and Management Second Canadian Edition INVESTMENTS: Analysis and Management Second Canadian Edition W. Sean Cleary Charles P. Jones

Chapter 10 Market Efficiency

Explain the concept of efficient markets. Describe the three forms of market efficiency – weak, semi-strong, and strong Discuss the evidence regarding the Efficient Market Hypothesis. State the implications of market efficiency for investors. Outline major exceptions to the Efficient Market Hypothesis. Learning Objectives

How well do markets respond to new information? Should it be possible to decide between a profitable and unprofitable investment given current information? Efficient Markets  The prices of all securities quickly and fully reflect all available information Efficient Markets

Large number of rational, profit-maximizing investors  Actively participate in the market  Individuals cannot affect market prices Information is costless, widely available Information is generated in a random fashion Investors react quickly and fully to new information Conditions for an Efficient Market

Quick price adjustment in response to the arrival of random information makes the reward for analysis low Prices reflect all available information Price changes are independent of one another and move in a random fashion  New information is independent of past Consequences of Efficient Market

Efficient market hypothesis  To what extent do securities markets quickly and fully reflect different available information? Three levels of Market Efficiency  Weak form - market level data  Semi-strong form - all public information  Strong form - all information, both public and private Market Efficiency Forms

Cumulative Levels of Market Efficiency and the Information Associated with Each Weak Form Market Data Strong Form All Information Semi-Strong Form Public Information

Prices reflect all past price and volume data Technical analysis, which relies on the past history of prices, is of little or no value in assessing future changes in price Market adjusts or incorporates this information quickly and fully Weak Form

Prices reflect all publicly available information Investors cannot act on new public information after its announcement and expect to earn above-average, risk-adjusted returns Encompasses weak form as a subset Semi-Strong Form

Prices reflect all information, public and private No group of investors should be able to earn abnormal rates of return by using publicly and privately available information Encompasses weak and semi-strong forms as subsets Strong Form

Keys:  Consistency of returns in excess of risk  Length of time over which returns are earned Economically efficient markets  Assets are priced so that investors cannot exploit any discrepancies and earn unusual returns Transaction costs matter Evidence on Market Efficiency

Test for independence (randomness) of stock price changes  If independent, trends in price changes do not exist  Overreaction hypothesis and evidence Test for profitability of trading rules after brokerage costs  Simple buy-and-hold better Weak-Form Evidence

Weak-Form EMH Mostly supportive of weak-form EMH E.g. technical trading rules have not consistently outperformed the market on average Runs tests looking for patterns in signs of returns i.e Filter rules sell after falls a certain % or buy after rises a certain %

Two Apparent Contradictions to the Weak-Form EMH 1.Momentum or persistence in stock returns  tendency of stocks that have done well over the past 6 to 12 months to continue to do well over the next 6 to 12 months 2.“Contrarian” Strategies  stocks that have done well over the past 3-5 year period, will do poorly over the subsequent 3-5 year period

Event studies  Empirical analysis of stock price behaviour surrounding a particular event  Examine company unique returns The residual error between the security’s actual return and that given by the index model Abnormal return (Ar it ) = R it - E(R it ) n Cumulative abnormal return (CAR) = Σ Ar it t=1 Semi-Strong-Form Evidence

Stock splits  Implications of split reflected in price immediately following the announcement Accounting changes  Quick reaction to real change in value Initial public offerings  Only issues purchased at offer price yield abnormal returns Announcements and news  Little impact on price after release Semi-Strong-Form Evidence

Professional Portfolio Manager Performance Substantial evidence that they do not outperform the market (or earn abnormal risk-adjusted returns) over the long run Based on fund averages Based on persistence in manager performance (evidence on this point is weaker)

Test performance of groups which have access to nonpublic information  Corporate insiders have valuable private information  Evidence that many have consistently earned abnormal returns on their stock transactions Insider transactions must be publicly reported Strong-Form Evidence

What should investors do if markets are efficient? Technical analysis  Not valuable if weak-form holds Fundamental analysis of intrinsic value  Not valuable if semi-strong-form holds  Experience average results Implications of Efficient Market Hypothesis

For professional money managers  Less time spent on individual securities Passive investing favoured Otherwise, must believe in superior insight  Tasks if markets informationally efficient Maintain correct diversification Achieve and maintain desired portfolio risk Manage tax burden Control transaction costs Implications of Efficient Market Hypothesis

Exceptions that appear to be contrary to market efficiency Earnings announcements affect stock prices  Adjustment occurs before announcement, but also significant amount after  Contrary to efficient market hypothesis because the lag should not exist Market Anomalies

Low P/E ratio stocks tend to outperform high P/E ratio stocks  Low P/E stocks generally have higher risk- adjusted returns  But P/E ratio is public information Should portfolio be based on P/E ratios?  Could result in an undiversified portfolio Market Anomalies

Size effect  Tendency for small firms to have higher risk- adjusted returns than large firms January effect  Tendency for small firm stock returns to be higher in January  Of 30.5% small-size premium, half of the effect occurs in January Market Anomalies

Value Line Ranking System  Advisory service that ranks 1,700 stocks from best (1) to worst (5) Probable price performance in next 12 months  , Group 1 stocks had annualized return of 19.3% Best investment letter performance overall  Transaction costs may offset returns Market Anomalies

Support for market efficiency is persuasive  Much research using different methods  Also many anomalies that cannot be explained satisfactorily Markets very efficient, but not totally  To outperform the market, fundamental analysis beyond the norm must be done Conclusions about Market Efficiency

If markets operationally efficient, some investors with the skill to detect a divergence between price and semi-strong value earn profits  Excludes the majority of investors  Anomalies offer opportunities Controversy about the degree of market efficiency still remains Conclusions about Market Efficiency

Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd. All rights reserved. Reproduction or translation of this work beyond that permitted by Access Copyright (The Canadian Copyright Licensing Agency) is unlawful. Requests for further information should be addressed to the Permissions Department, John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd. The purchaser may make back-up copies for his or her own use only and not for distribution or resale. The author and the publisher assume no responsibility for errors, omissions, or damages caused by the use of these programs or from the use of the information contained herein. Copyright