The document summarizes key ideas from Andrew Lo and Burton Malkiel regarding the efficient market hypothesis. Both authors conclude that while market prices may not always be perfectly efficient in the short-run due to irrational investor behavior, the market conveys information efficiently over the long-run as irrational behaviors are corrected. Lo uses an evolutionary framework to explain how markets adapt dynamically, while Malkiel provides evidence that anomalies tend to disappear as they are exploited by investors. Overall, the document analyzes how investor psychology can lead to short-term inefficiencies that are ultimately corrected through the mechanisms of an adaptive market.
According to the EMH, stocks always trade at their fair value on stock exchanges, making it impossible for investors to either purchase undervalued stocks or sell stocks for inflated prices. As such, it should be impossible to outperform the overall market through expert stock selection or market timing, and that the only way an investor can possibly obtain higher returns is by purchasing riskier investments.
According to the EMH, stocks always trade at their fair value on stock exchanges, making it impossible for investors to either purchase undervalued stocks or sell stocks for inflated prices. As such, it should be impossible to outperform the overall market through expert stock selection or market timing, and that the only way an investor can possibly obtain higher returns is by purchasing riskier investments.
Discuss the differences between weak form, semi-strong form and strong form capital market efficiency, and critically evaluate the significance of the efficient market hypothesis (EMH) for the financial manager, using examples or cases in real-life.
: Security and Portfolio Analysis :Efficient market theoryRahulKaushik108
Key Concepts of Efficient market theory: Very Lucid presentation , very Useful for MBA student to understand the Concepts of Efficient Market theory( Random walk hypotheses ) .The key idea of the hypotheses is" no one can efficiently out predict the market" or in other terms, technical analysis or fundamental analysis can not beat "the naive buy and hold strategy".
According to the EMH, stocks always trade at their fair value on stock exchanges, making it impossible for investors to either purchase undervalued stocks or sell stocks for inflated prices. As such, it should be impossible to outperform the overall market through expert stock selection or market timing, and that the only way an investor can possibly obtain higher returns is by purchasing riskier investments.
According to the EMH, stocks always trade at their fair value on stock exchanges, making it impossible for investors to either purchase undervalued stocks or sell stocks for inflated prices. As such, it should be impossible to outperform the overall market through expert stock selection or market timing, and that the only way an investor can possibly obtain higher returns is by purchasing riskier investments.
Discuss the differences between weak form, semi-strong form and strong form capital market efficiency, and critically evaluate the significance of the efficient market hypothesis (EMH) for the financial manager, using examples or cases in real-life.
: Security and Portfolio Analysis :Efficient market theoryRahulKaushik108
Key Concepts of Efficient market theory: Very Lucid presentation , very Useful for MBA student to understand the Concepts of Efficient Market theory( Random walk hypotheses ) .The key idea of the hypotheses is" no one can efficiently out predict the market" or in other terms, technical analysis or fundamental analysis can not beat "the naive buy and hold strategy".
Weak Form of Efficient Market Hypothesis – Evidence from PakistanMuhammadFaizanAfridi
presentation on Weak Form of Efficient Market Hypothesis – Evidence from Pakistan presented by Muhammad Faizan Afridi & Sahibzada Muhammad Junaid.
Institute of Management Sciences
MBA(1.5)
Weak Form of Efficient Market Hypothesis – Evidence from PakistanMuhammadFaizanAfridi
presentation on Weak Form of Efficient Market Hypothesis – Evidence from Pakistan presented by Muhammad Faizan Afridi & Sahibzada Muhammad Junaid.
Institute of Management Sciences
MBA(1.5)
This paper outlines the basics of Modern Portfolio Theory, the Capital Asset Pricing Model, 'Technical Analysis' and the Efficient Market Hypothesis. Far from being obsolesced, the underlying concepts still exist today though digital disruptions du jour shroud them,
StockTakers Risk Price partitions markets with clarity of firms debt structure. Modal Geometry projects trading connections worth creation process better from N-dimensions than GAAP can account from 2-dimensions. Know better, trade better, because we can.
Adaptive Markets: Financial Evolution at the Speed of Thought [FULL] pejidac125
A new, evolutionary explanation of markets and investor behaviorHalf of all Americans have money in the stock market, yet economists can't agree on whether investors and markets are rational and efficient, as modern financial theory assumes, or irrational and inefficient, as behavioral economists believe--and as financial bubbles, crashes, and crises suggest. This is one of the biggest debates in economics and the value or futility of investment management and financial regulation hang on the outcome. In this groundbreaking book, Andrew Lo cuts through this debate with a new framework, the Adaptive Markets Hypothesis, in which rationality and irrationality coexist.Drawing on psychology, evolutionary biology, neuroscience, artificial intelligence, and other fields, Adaptive Markets shows that the theory of market efficiency isn't wrong but merely incomplete. When markets are unstable, investors react instinctively, creating inefficiencies for others to exploit. Lo's new paradigm explains how financial evolution shapes behavior and markets at the speed of thought--a fact revealed by swings between stability and crisis, profit and loss, and innovation and regulation.A fascinating intellectual journey filled with compelling stories, Adaptive Markets starts with the origins of market efficiency and its failures, turns to the foundations of investor behavior, and concludes with practical implications--including how hedge funds have become the Galapagos Islands of finance, what really happened in the 2008 meltdown, and how we might avoid future crises.An ambitious new answer to fundamental questions in economics, Adaptive Markets is essential reading for anyone who wants to know how markets really work.
Biased Shorts: Short sellers’ Disposition Effect and Limits to ArbitrageTrading Game Pty Ltd
Abstract: We investigate whether short sellers are subject to the disposition effect using a novel dataset that allows to identify the closing of short positions. Consistent with the disposition effect, short sellers are more likely to close a position the higher their capital gains.
Furthermore, stocks with high short sale capital gains experience negative returns, suggesting that their disposition effect has an effect on stock prices. A trading strategy based on this finding achieves significant three-factor alphas. Overall, short sellers’ behavioral biases limit their ability to arbitrage away the mispricing caused by the disposition effect of other market participants.
Studies within the field of Behavioural Finance have shown that due to human bias,
market participants do not always act rationally. This creates opportunities in the market for traders to profit from the inefficiencies created by these biases. However, Behavioural Finance also shows that these same biases cause traders to act in ways that could have negative impacts on their personal trading results. The perception of fund managers does change when they have been trained on Behavioural Finance (Nikiforow, 2010). Training sharpens the awareness of loss aversion and limits the affinity for conformity. Nikiforow suggests that what is needed is to incorporate these approaches into the investment process (Nikiforow, 2010). This paper reviews some of the common behavioural biases and how they can impact trading. It then covers the general content and structure of a trading plan and recommends areas where traders can incorporate behavioural bias awareness into their plans using rules and checkpoints.
Bridging the Gap between Psychology and Economics: The Role of Behavioral Fin...inventionjournals
This article is a descriptive presentation of how behavioral finance plays key role in providing insight into how individuals’ investment behavior typically deviates from traditional economic theories. The efficient market hypothesis (EMH) and capital asset pricing model (CAPM) theories have gained prominence in modern finance platform. The adequacy of these popular, rational-based behavior theories has however, remained skeptical among many scholars including Daniel Kahneman, Amos Tversky, and Richard H. Thaler. While the EMH and CAPM theories have contributed significantly to the investment world, some scholars contend the theories fail to fully explain certain inconsistent behaviors exhibited in the investment world. Behavioral finance is a new theory that attempts to fill the void between psychology and economics by providing a better understanding of investor behavior through the theories of psychology. Investment decisions are impacted by an array of irrational behavioral biases. The article identifies some finance and economic theory anomalies such as the January effect, equity premium puzzle, and others, which shift away from the traditional economic theories. Understanding these anomalies not only would assist individuals have a sense of how investors generally behave in the investment arena but also would help in efficient capital allocation.
International Journal of Business and Management Invention (IJBMI)inventionjournals
International Journal of Business and Management Invention (IJBMI) is an international journal intended for professionals and researchers in all fields of Business and Management. IJBMI publishes research articles and reviews within the whole field Business and Management, new teaching methods, assessment, validation and the impact of new technologies and it will continue to provide information on the latest trends and developments in this ever-expanding subject. The publications of papers are selected through double peer reviewed to ensure originality, relevance, and readability. The articles published in our journal can be accessed online
2. In his 2006 book Hedgehogging, investor Barton Biggs described the angst of fellow hedge fund
managers trying to earn alpha. Explained one exasperated manager:
“The larger capital and the bigger talent pool now being deployed by hedge funds mean
that the pricing of everything from asset classes to individual securities is under intense
scrutiny by manic investors, who stare at screens all day, have massive databases, and
swing large amounts of money with lightning speed. This has the effect of bidding up the
prices and reducing the returns of all mispriced investments. Obvious anomalies now
disappear, almost instantly. In effect, the alpha available for capture by hedge funds has
to be spread over more funds with bigger money, resulting in lower returns on invested
capital for hedge funds as an asset class.”
Another lamented:
“It‟s a jungle in [global] macro right now. There are so many macro players… they‟re
bumping into each other. There must be a couple of hundred new macro hedge formed in
the last six months… Some of these guys are so green, they can confuse you with their
stupidity, and they are big and clumsy. It‟s all very disorienting!”1
Through the lens of the Efficient Market Hypotheses (EMH), Andrew Loi and Burton Malkielii attempt
to explain why these phenomena might occur, what signals prices offer in the short- and long-runs, and
whether or not EMH actually holds in practice. Lo‟s study settles on biological and evolutionary
theories to explain behavior of security prices and investors, while Malkiel leans on his random walk
theory to describe market efficiency. Ultimately, both share the mixed conclusions that, despite non-
persistence of rationality, which may cause short-run mispricing, conveyance of information is indeed
reflected in a stock‟s price.
The joy of market inefficiency, then, is that it is ephemeral. Security prices are signals – signals
to buy or sell, signals of relative valuation, and so on – and, if they happen to be incorrect, then investors
who can identify that information will exploit the mispricing until it is negated. Over time, stocks do
exhibit behavioral patterns, caused by innumerable factors. These patterns, like stocks themselves, have
a lifecycle. In infancy, a few traders may notice that a stock or asset class shows a distinct signal – the
January effect, for instance, and they will trade profitably on their proprietary knowledge. However, as
patterns become increasingly exploited, traders‟ ability to act profitably shrinks, and the effect
eventually changes entirely or dies. Quantitative traders, proprietary desks, and hedge funds – indeed,
the hobgoblins of Biggs‟ anecdote – will profit and profit until no alpha remains, so that “the more
potentially profitable a discoverable pattern is, the less likely it will survive.” (Malkiel, 72) Richard
Roll summed up this frustrating experience succinctly:
“I have personally tried to invest money… in every single anomaly and predictive device
that academics have dreamed up… And I have yet to make a nickel on any of these
supposed market inefficiencies… a true market inefficiency ought to be an exploitable
1
Biggs, Barton. 2006. Hedgehogging. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
3. opportunity. If there‟s nothing investors can exploit in a systematic way, time in and
time out, then it‟s very hard to say that information is not being properly incorporated
into stock prices.” (Malkiel, 72)
While Malkiel‟s work is not as reliant on behavior as Lo‟s, it does share some commonalities.
For one, high volatility, such as was experienced in October 1987, may, in fact, be explained by
fundamental factors conspiring to drive fear into the market. A decline in US Treasury levels – perhaps
indicative of heightened appetite for equity risk – combined with a threatened merger tax and falling US
Dollar exchange rates likely changed risk perceptions. Investors, then, were not entirely irrational to sit
on the sidelines as nearly one-third of the market‟s value fell. In reality, risk premiums incorrectly
reflected the underlying fundamentals of the market, causing correction. Similarly, the technology stock
bubble caused a misallocation; in this case, of capital funding. Investors, fooled by irrational
exuberance poured so much money into the asset class that some eventually needed to be pulled back,
resulting in a correction of prices. In both cases, investors acted irrationally – then, rationally.
The overriding theme of Lo‟s work is that the markets are a living, dynamic organism, and that
natural laws such as evolution, human cognition, and experiential-based behavior contribute to their
behavior. Synthesized, these elements lead to the adaptive markets hypothesis (AMH), an attempt to
“reconcile the EMH with all of its behavioral alternatives.” He writes,
“One particularly promising direction is to view the financial markets from a biological
perspective and, specifically, within an evolutionary framework in which markets,
instruments, institutions and investors interact and evolve dynamically according to the
law of economic selection. Under this view, financial agents compete and adapt, but they
do not necessarily do so in an optimal fashion.” (14-15)
It is not hard to overlay Lo‟s framework on Malkiel‟s findings. Since they evolve, markets do tend to
correct, which satisfies Lo‟s reconciliation of EMH as well as Malkiel‟s evidence of investor behavior in
particular cases. In fact, Malkiel even blames the technology bubble partially on “psychological
contagion.” (61) Lo goes even further to note that investor risk tolerance in 2000 was strongly
influenced by a large population of investors who had never experienced a true bear market. (20)
Why else, then, might markets act inefficiently in the short-run? Both authors cite news as an
overriding factor for some price discrepancies. Investors tend to react inappropriately to news, which is
by nature unpredictable, yet empirical research suggests that markets eventually revert to the mean in the
long-run. This is evidence for Lo‟s assertion that organisms learn and adapt – and that, given enough
mistakes, weak investors and investment strategies eventually give way to stronger, fitter investors and
strategies. Borrowing from Darwinian theory, survival of the fittest truly rules the markets. (19)
As for market characteristics, Lo asserts that diverse groups of investors competing for scarce
resources (i.e. alpha) in large, well-developed markets (e.g. the 10-year U.S. Treasury market) will
4. effectively and quickly move prices towards equilibrium. This theory may not hold up in less well-
developed or smaller markets, so the AMH is highly dependent on context. Malkiel, for his part, uses
small company outperformance versus that of large companies to suggest that if size is a more critical
measure of risk – as opposed to the traditional beta – then the market‟s views on small companies is
inefficient. Fama and French agreed, but argued that markets are in fact efficient and size is a better
indicator of equity risk.
Some trading strategies may generate persistently outsized returns over long periods. For
instance, contrarian strategies take advantage of the tendency to revert to means in the long-run.
Because positive serial correlation exists over a short horizon, stocks exhibit negative serial correlation
and mean reversion over longer periods. (Malkiel, 63) According to Lo,
“In some cases investors may overreact to performance, selling stocks that have
experienced recent losses or buying stocks that have enjoyed recent gains. Such
overreaction tends to push prices beyond „fair‟ or „rational‟ market value, only to have
rational investors take the other side of the trades and bring prices back in line eventually.
Another implication is that contrarian investment strategies – strategies in which „losers‟
are purchased and „winners‟ are sold – will earn superior returns.” (6)
So, then, what do stock prices tell us – and is EMH doomed if the answer is little at all? Malkiel
argues that even though markets may convey inefficient prices, they still utilize information efficiently.
The incentive for investors to uncover information in order to exploit security mispricing is too great,
and this information will be conveyed back to the price, usually sooner rather than later. Lo, too,
concludes that investor behavior is to be blamed (or lauded) for stock price discrepancies and
subsequent correction. He uses evolutionary psychology and cognitive neuroscience to explain that
markets tend to move towards efficiency despite seeming randomness. Like Malkiel, he has concluded
that certain profitable trading schemes will be exploited until no alpha remains, much like Biggs‟ global
macro fund managers‟ experience. In time, we might assume that, assuming their complaints are true,
that global macro will fall out of fashion according to Malkiel‟s and Lo‟s hypotheses.
The lessons of Andrew Lo and Burton Malkiel are timeless, yet the irony of EMH is that our
markets today suffer from extreme inefficiencies. The idea that information is transferred to investors
via prices is meaningless when illiquidity has caused a dearth of useful data. Until assets are able to
express information, not befuddlement, markets will look like the anomalies described herein. Perhaps
these experiences will cause us to become more adept at spotting inefficiencies and their causes.
i
Lo, Andrew. “Efficient Markets Hypothesis” in The New Palgrave: A Dictionary of Economics, Second Edition, 2007. New
York: Palgrave McMillan.
ii
Malkiel, Burton. “The Efficient Market Hypothesis and Its Critics” in Journal of Economic Perspectives, Volume 17,
Number 1, Winter 2003.