Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Chapter 14: Learning Objectives  Basics of Stock Markets  Explaining Stock Price Behaviour: Efficient Markets & Fundamentalists  Stock Market Volatility.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Chapter 14: Learning Objectives  Basics of Stock Markets  Explaining Stock Price Behaviour: Efficient Markets & Fundamentalists  Stock Market Volatility."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 14: Learning Objectives  Basics of Stock Markets  Explaining Stock Price Behaviour: Efficient Markets & Fundamentalists  Stock Market Volatility  The Home-bias in Stock Purchases  International Stock Price Linkages

2 Some Institutional Background  Stocks are traded in markets OTC (over the counter) Exchanges (TSE, CDNX)  Stock performance is measured via indexes TSE300, DJIA, S&P 500

3 Theories of Stock Price Determination  Efficient Markets hypothesis weak form semi-strong form strong form

4 Efficient Markets Hypothesis: Weak form Investors have an “information” set on which “expectations” of future stock prices are formed E(S t+1 | S t, S t-1,…)=S t If the past history of stock prices is known then E(S t+1 ) = S t so that S t+1 =S t +U t giving rise to the random walk of stock prices

5 The Random Walk of Stock Prices

6

7 Efficient Markets Hypothesis (cont’d)  Semi-strong form expands the Information set to include other fundamental macroeconomic variables such as interest rates, inflation, money growth,….)  The strong form would incorporate private or insider information. This would most severely limit the profitable opportunities from changes in stock price behaviour

8 TSE 300 and the Treasury bill Rate, 1976-2002

9 Interest Rates and Stock Prices Stock Price RR LF LF 2 LF0 LF1 LF s R  S 

10 A Different but Compatible View: The Fundamentalist Approach  Stock prices should reflect expectations about the flow of future dividends  Assume that dividends reflect profits of the firm  Assume a constant opportunity cost of holding money  Assume a constant growth rate of dividends  Assume that dividends paid out forever

11 The Mathematics of the Fundamentalist Approach S = [d 1 /(1+R)] + [d 2 /(1+R )2 ] +….. d n = d 1 (1+g) n-1 S= d 1 /(R-g)

12 Anomalies and Other features of stock price behaviour  Volatility and its Measurement Figure 14.4  Price-Earnings Ratio  January & other calendar effects  Bubbles (South Sea, Mississippi, Tulipmania )  International Linkages

13 What Causes “Noise” in Stock Markets Case 1: Market dominated by Informed Traders Case 2: Market dominated by Uninformed traders  LOW VOLATILITY  HIGH VOLATILITY Informed Traders Inf. Traders Noisy Traders Noisy Traders

14 Stock Market Volume

15 International Stock Price Behaviour

16 The “Crash” of 1987: An Illustration of the Fundamentalist Approach from Financial Focus 14.2

17 Summary  Stock market behaviour is governed by the efficient markets hypothesis which comes in the weak, semi- strong and strong forms  The Fundamentalist approach explains the determination of stock prices according to the flow of dividends generated by a stock  Stock price behaviour is also subject to a number of anomalies and there are a number of other interesting aspects about stock prices


Download ppt "Chapter 14: Learning Objectives  Basics of Stock Markets  Explaining Stock Price Behaviour: Efficient Markets & Fundamentalists  Stock Market Volatility."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google