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Market efficiency

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Market efficiency. Specific meaning of the term “market efficiency” in financial economics: “security prices fully reflect all available information” So… this is “ Informational Efficiency” - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Market efficiency Specific meaning of the term “market efficiency” in financial economics: “security prices fully reflect all available information” So… this is “Informational Efficiency” Realistically: an efficient market is one in which information is quickly incorporated into the price. Tests of market efficiency refer (since Fama, 1970) to three progressively more demanding concepts: Weak form Semi-strong form Strong form
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Page 1: Market efficiency

Market efficiencySpecific meaning of the term “market efficiency” in financial

economics: “security prices fully reflect all available information”

So… this is “Informational Efficiency”

Realistically: an efficient market is one in which information is quickly incorporated into the price.

Tests of market efficiency refer (since Fama, 1970) to three progressively more demanding concepts:

• Weak form • Semi-strong form• Strong form

Page 2: Market efficiency

Market efficiency tests

The difference between the three lies in what information is taken into account:

• Weak form is all info from past prices incorporated?

• Semi-strong is all publicly available info incorporated?

• Strong form is all info, public or private, incorporated?

Page 3: Market efficiency

Market efficiency

• Weak form no additional info from past pricestests of return predictability

• Semi-strong all publicly available info incorporatedevent studies

• Strong form all info, public or private, incorporatedevent studies

NB: if strong form is true, then the value of security analysis becomes suspect—though someone must be doing it

Page 4: Market efficiency

Return on equity of takeover targets

around date of takeover attempt

Keown-Pinkerton, 1981, cited in BKM

Page 5: Market efficiency

Market efficiency

Two aspects, both of which are relevant:

• Stock picking

• Timing (especially for the market as a whole)

Page 6: Market efficiency

Tests of return predictability

1. Time patterns

• Monday – 33% (1962-78)• January 5% (small firms)

3% (large firms)Why? Tax losses? (but worked before 1917)

Page 7: Market efficiency

Tests of return predictability

2. Prediction from past returns

(a) Correlation / regression

(best to use residual from CAPM or APT model to eliminate role of time-varying risk-premia)

Quite a few show significant, albeit small, correlations – especially small shares)

ttt brar 1

Page 8: Market efficiency

Tests of return predictability

2. Prediction from past returns

(b) Runs testsIgnore size of changes and just look at positive versus negative

(avoids overemphasis on unusual extreme events)

Page 9: Market efficiency

Tests of return predictability

2. Prediction from past returns

(c) Filter rulesSuch as: “buy when the stock has increased by (say) 0.5% from its previous low; sell when stock has fallen by (say) 0.5% from its previous high.”

(Based on the idea that small fluctuations don’t mean news – big fluctuations do)

Page 10: Market efficiency

Tests of return predictability

2. Prediction from past returns

(d) MomentumFor the next month, hold only the stocks that have appreciated over the

past year

(or could do this for shorter-term fluctuations)

Used to generate good returns, though high transactions costs. Has faded

Similar: “relative strength”: stocks that are high relative to recent average

Page 11: Market efficiency

Tests of return predictability

2. Prediction from past returns

Most of these tests show small inefficiencies, (especially at very high frequencies – seconds)

Most could not be exploited profitably by investors because of transactions costs

(Transactions costs include the bid-ask spread employed by specialists to defend themselves against better-informed investors)

Page 12: Market efficiency

Tests of return predictability

3. Returns and firm characteristics

The Size Effect (small cap have high returns)Market-to-book (value firms have high returns)Earnings-to-price (high earnings firms have high returns)

(These could all be “factor-mimicking” characteristics – capturing additional dimensions of risk )

Page 13: Market efficiency

Tests of return predictability

3. Returns and firm characteristics

The Size Effect 20% extra return on very small vs. large, 1936-77

(risk-adjusted by CAPM)Only affects lowest quintile of firmsMost of it happens in January!

Page 14: Market efficiency

Size effect

Ibbotson, cited in BKM

Page 15: Market efficiency

Cochrane, EP 99

Small firm portfolios

Page 16: Market efficiency

Tests of return predictability3. Returns and firm characteristics

Why the size effect?

Maybe beta poorly measured Small stocks rarely traded – leads to bias in beta estimateShrinking firm may have out-of-date beta

Is CAPM a good enough risk adjuster?Using other risk factors (though not size) in an APT

reduced the size factor a lot (11% to <2%)Key factor here: risk-premium on corporate bonds

relative to govt bonds

Page 17: Market efficiency

Tests of return predictability3. Returns and firm characteristics

Why the size effect?

Transactions costs especially highCompensation for liquidityImpossible to profit from effect?

Page 18: Market efficiency

Tests of return predictability3. Returns and firm characteristics

The Book-to-market effectGap of 8% per annum between highest and lowest deciles of firms

ranked by the ratio of their book value to market value(high B/M predicts high return)

Maybe value firms are close to bankruptcy but recovered – so these firms are not a hedge for recession, hence high yield

“Value” (high B/M) and “Growth” (low B/M) stocks (These terms not quite synonymous with B/M)

The Earning-to-price effectBut this seems to have no independent effect after size and

market-to-book taken account of.

The neglected firm effect

Page 19: Market efficiency

Book to market effect

French, cited in BKM

Page 20: Market efficiency
Page 21: Market efficiency

Tests of return predictability3. Returns and firm characteristicsQuestions to ask about any of these anomalies:

• Is it real? (Data-mining)• Are we just missing another factor (especially one

correlated with investors’ consumption/welfare)(i.e. firm characteristics correlated with a risk-factor that the market prices but we have omitted)

• Mis-estimate of beta (or other factor loadings)?• Transactions costs?• Risk premia changing over time?

(CAPM/APT use stable λ’s)Truly inefficient?


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