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Market Efficiency
Lecture 8
30 Oct 2007
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Brownian Motion
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The Roman Lucretius's scientific poem On the Nature of Things (c. 60 BC) : "Observe what happens when sunbeams are admitted into a building and shed light on its shadowy places. You will see a multitude of tiny particles mingling in a multitude of ways... their dancing is an actual indication of underlying movements of matter that are hidden from our sight... It originates with the atoms which move of themselves Jan Ingenhousz had described the irregular motion of coal dust particles on the surface of alcohol in 1785.
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Brownian motion is traditionally regarded as discovered by the botanist Robert Brown in 1827. It is believed that Brown was studying pollen particles floating in water under the microscope . The first person to describe the mathematics behind Brownian motion was Thorvald N. Thiele in 1880 in a paper on the method of least squares. This was followed independently by Louis Bachelier in 1900 in his PhD thesis "Thorie de la spculation", in which he presented a stochastic analysis of the stock and option markets.
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Louis Bachelier
Louis Bachelier, in his Ph.D. thesis (Thorie de la spculation) at the Sorbonne in 1900, wrote: Past, present, and even discounted future events are reflected in market price.
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The tragic hero of financial economics was the unfortunate Louis Bachelier. In his 1900 dissertation written in Paris, Theorie de la Spculation (and in his subsequent work, esp. 1906, 1913), he anticipated much of what was to become standard fare in financial theory: random walk of financial market prices, Brownian motion and martingales. Bachelier's work on random walks predated Einstein's celebrated study of Brownian motion by five years.
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His innovativeness, however, was not appreciated by his professors or contemporaries. His dissertation received poor marks from his teachers and, consequently blackballed, he quickly dropped into the shadows of the academic underground. After a series of minor posts, he ended up obscurely teaching in Besanon for much of the rest of his life. Virtually nothing else is known of this pioneer - his work being largely ignored until the 1960s.
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11 March 1870 Louis Jean-Baptiste Alphonse Bachelier is born in Le Havre 11 January 1889 Fathers death 7 May 1889 Mothers death 18911892 Military service 1892 Student at Sorbonne October 1895 Bachelor in sciences at Sorbonne July 1897 Certificate in mathematical physics 29 March 1900 Bachelier defends his thesis, Theorie de la Speculation 19091914 Free lecturer at Sorbonne 1912 Publication of Calcul des Probabilites 1914 Publication of Le Jeu, la Chance et le Hasard 9 September 1914 Drafted as a private in the French army 31 December 1918 Back from the army 10 December 1919 A member of the French Mathematical Society 19191922 Assistant professor in Besancon 19221925 Assistant professor in Dijon 19251927 Associate professor in Rennes January 1926 Blackballed in Dijon 1 October 1927 Professor in Besancon 1937 Professor Emeritus 1 October 1937 Retirement 1941 His last publication 28 April 1946 Louis Bachelier dies in Saint-Servan-sur-Mer; and is buried in Sanvic near Le Havre 1996 The Bachelier Finance Society is founded
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Why would an investor choose an active strategy over a passive strategy, or visa versa? The answer depends on the beliefs of the investors on whether or not the market is efficient.
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Weak
SemiStrong
Strong
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Weak form efficiency: The past behavior of prices cannot help us predict future movements in prices. Price changes over time are statistically independent. Semi-strong form efficiency: There is no public information that can help us predict future movements in prices. Prices quickly reflect new value-changing information. Strong form efficiency: Even the private information of experts and insiders cannot help us predict future movements in prices. Professional managers are unable to accurately forecast the future prices of individual stocks.
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In other words...
Weak form efficiency: Past prices are useless! Semi-strong form efficiency: Public information is useless! Strong form efficiency: All available information, including private information is useless!
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Implications of Weak Form Efficiency: Past trading data contains no relevant information about future prices. Best guess of the future price is the current price plus the expected return on the stock.
Consistent with Random Walk Theory: Movements in stock prices from day to day do not reflect any pattern, they are random.
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Technical analysis is useless if this is true! Technical analysis looks for patterns in past prices, as opposed to fundamental analysis which looks for fundamental value. Even if there are patterns in the market, the presence of a few smart investors would be cause them to profit from these patterns for a while, but once the market recognizes the pattern it will disappear.
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Implications of Semi-Strong Form Efficiency: Analysis of financial statements such as income statements and balance sheets will not reveal any relevant information about future prices. Financial analysts cannot identify mis-priced stocks from financial statements. Fund managers who try to beat the market by selecting stocks could do no better than earn an average return.
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Implications of Strong Form Efficiency Insider information and insider trading is not useful. There will be no gradual information leakage.
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In 2002, a Martha Stewart was charged with insider trading regarding the sale of 3,928 shares in pharmaceutical company ImClone, days before its application for a new drug was denied. According to SEC allegations, she avoided a loss of $45,673 by selling all 3,928 shares of her ImClone stock. Stewart was a friend of ImClone cofounder Samuel Waksal. The day following her sale, the stock value fell 16%. Over the next month, the price of the shares dropped 70%.
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Weak Form Efficiency: Prices reflect the information set comprising past market trading data (i.e. prices, volume, dividends, etc.) Semi-Strong Form Efficiency: Prices reflect the information set comprising past market trading data plus all other currently available public information. Strong Form Efficiency: Prices reflect all public and private information.
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There is little reason to believe markets are strong form efficient. There seems to be compelling reason to believe that markets are weak-form efficient. A compromise: some prices, some of the time, might not reflect all publicly available information, but most assets, most of the time, do reflect this information.
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Implication of EMH
Competitive forces in the capital markets drive the market prices of securities to their fundamental values. The more competitive a market, the more efficient it is. If the markets are efficient, the price of a security today is the best predictor of its fundamental value.
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Implication of EMH
Efficiency does not imply that the observed prices reflect the fundamental value of the stock at all times. It implies only that deviations from it's fundamental value are random and unpredictable. If the markets are not efficient, security prices may deviate from their fundamental value. This implies that there exist strategies for beating the market.
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Inefficient Markets
Reasons for Inefficient Markets 1. Market Segmentation 2. Illiquidity 3. High Costs of Transaction and Information
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Investor A: Believes the market is efficient and that it is not possible to beat the market and finds it optimal to follow a passive strategy by holding the market index.
Investor B: Believes the market is not efficient and that it is possible to beat the market, and thus seeks to follow an active strategy.
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Passive equity portfolio management Long-term buy-and-hold strategy Usually tracks an index over time Designed to match market performance Manager is judged on how well they track the target index Active equity portfolio management Attempts to outperform a passive benchmark portfolio on a risk-adjusted basis
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Passive Strategy
1. Buy and Hold: Form a portfolio based on certain criteria and hold for a predetermined period. 2. Portfolio Indexation: Replicate the performance of a market index. The strategy does not try to look for undervalued or overvalued stocks, nor does it try to predict movements in the market.
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Theoretical motivation: According to the CAPM, the market portfolio is the portfolio tangent to the efficient portfolio, and it is not possible obtain higher returns for any level of risk using another portfolio. Costs of Active Management: There are costs of researching information, costs of analyzing information, transaction costs.
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Empirical Motivation:
1. Individual investors under-perform the S&P 500. Barber and Odean (1997, 1998, 2000)
2. Institutional investors (who have lowers transactions costs and access to better information) do not outperform the market: Jensen(1968), Malkiel (1995), Cahart (1997). This is also true when you adjust for the price of risk using CAPM or a multifactor model.
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Event Studies
If security prices reflect all available information, then price changes must reflect new information. Suppose that the single index model holds
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Examine prices and returns over time
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Announcement Date
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Response of 172 firms in which a controlling shareholder offered to buy out the minority shareholders. Acquiring shareholders pay a premium over current market prices. So an announcement should cause prices to jump! This is evidence of an efficient market in that prices fully reflect the new information within minutes of the announcement. A positive report gets digested by the market within 5 minutes, whereas a negative report takes on average 12 minutes to digest.
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Minute by minute report of stock prices of firms featured in CNBCs Morning or Midday Call.
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10-43
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Selection Bias Issue Would you publish your successful money making strategy? No. Only those who fail will publish their results to the world. Pre-selection in favor of failed strategies.
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Every take out a coin. Flip the coin 10 times. Heads you win, tails you lose! Count the number of heads. Who is our big winner? Now lets repeat the exercise.
Are successful winners able to repeat! Most likely not! Is it skill or merely luck? It is purely luck.
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Serial Correlation Positive or negative serial correlation is evidence that stock returns are related to past returns. Evidence: Over very short time horizons evidence of weak price trends. Not enough to suggest the existence of trading opportunities. Momentum Effect Good or bad performance continues over time for the best and worst recent performers. Evidence: Over 3-12 month holding periods, there is some evidence of positive momentum
Returns over Long Horizons (over multiyear periods) Evidence: pronounced negative correlation, evidence on reversals. Reversal Effect: Winners become losers and losers become winners.
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Book-to-Market Effect
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Post-Earnings-Announcement Drift
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