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1 Chapter 9 The Capital Markets and Market Efficiency.

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Presentation on theme: "1 Chapter 9 The Capital Markets and Market Efficiency."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Chapter 9 The Capital Markets and Market Efficiency

2 2 Outline u Introduction u Role of the capital markets u Efficient market hypothesis u Anomalies

3 3 Introduction u Capital market theory springs from the notion that: People like return People do not like risk Dispersion around expected return is a reasonable measure of risk

4 4 Role of the Capital Markets u Definition u Economic function u Continuous pricing function u Fair price function

5 5 Definition u Capital markets trade securities with lives of more than one year u Examples of capital markets New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) American Stock Exchange (AMEX) Chicago Board of Trade Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE)

6 6 Economic Function u The economic function of capital markets facilitates the transfer of money from savers to borrowers E.g., mortgages, Treasury bonds, corporate stocks and bonds

7 7 Continuous Pricing Function u The continuous pricing function of capital markets means prices are available moment by moment Continuous prices are an advantage to investors Investors are less confident in their ability to get a quick quotation for securities that do not trade often

8 8 Fair Price Function u The fair price function of capital markets means that an investor can trust the financial system The function removes the fear of buying or selling at an unreasonable price The more participants and the more formal the marketplace, the greater the likelihood that the buyer is getting a fair price

9 9 Efficient Market Hypothesis u Definition u Types of efficiency u Weak form u Semi-strong form u Strong form u Semi-efficient market hypothesis u Security prices and random walks

10 10 Definition u The efficient market hypothesis (EMH) is the theory supporting the notion that market prices are in fact fair The EMH is perhaps the most important paradigm in finance

11 11 Types of Efficiency u Operational efficiency measures how well things function in terms of speed of execution and accuracy It is a function of the number of order that are lost or filled incorrectly It is a function of the elapsed time between the receipt of an order and its execution

12 12 Types of Efficiency (cont’d) u Informational efficiency is a measure of how quickly and accurately the market reacts to new information It relates directly to the EMH The market is informationally very efficient –Security prices adjust rapidly and accurately to new information –The market is still not completely efficient

13 13 Weak Form u Definition u Charting u Runs test

14 14 Definition u The weak form of the EMH states that it is impossible to predict future stock prices by analyzing prices from the past The current price is a fair one that considers any information contained in the past price data Charting techniques or of no use in predicting stock prices

15 15 Definition (cont’d) Example Which stock is a better buy? Stock A Stock B Current Stock Price

16 16 Definition (cont’d) Example (cont’d) Solution: According to the weak form of the EMH, neither stock is a better buy, since the current price already reflects all past information.

17 17 Charting u People who study charts are technical analysts or chartists Chartists look for patterns in a sequence of stock prices Many chartists have a behavioral element

18 18 Runs Test u A runs test is a nonparametric statistical technique to test the likelihood that a series of price movements occurred by chance A run is an uninterrupted sequence of the same observation A runs test calculates the number of ways an observed number of runs could occur given the relative number of different observations and the probability of this number

19 19 Conducting A Runs Test

20 20 Semi-Strong Form u The semi-strong form of the EMH states that security prices fully reflect all publicly available information E.g., past stock prices, economic reports, brokerage firm recommendations, investment advisory letters, etc.

21 21 Semi-Strong Form (cont’d) u Academic research supports the semi-strong form of the EMH by investigating various corporate announcements, such as: Stock splits Cash dividends Stock dividends u This means investor are seldom going to beat the market by analyzing public news

22 22 Strong Form u The strong form of the EMH states that security prices fully reflect all public and private information u This means even corporate insiders cannot make abnormal profits by using inside information Inside information is information not available to the general public

23 23 Semi-Efficient Market Hypothesis u The semi-efficient market hypothesis (SEMH) states that the market prices some stocks more efficiently than others Less well-known companies are less efficiently priced The market may be tiered A security pecking order may exist

24 24 Security Prices and Random Walks u The unexpected portion of news follows a random walk News arrives randomly and security prices adjust to the arrival of the news –We cannot forecast specifics of the news very accurately

25 25 Anomalies u Definition u Low PE effect u Low-priced stocks u Small firm effect u Neglected firm effect u Market overreaction u January effect

26 26 Anomalies (cont’d) u Day-of-the-week effect u Turn-of-the calendar effect u Persistence of technical analysis u Chaos theory

27 27 Definition u A financial anomaly refers to unexplained results that deviate from those expected under finance theory Especially those related to the efficient market hypothesis

28 28 Low PE Effect u Stocks with low PE ratios provide higher returns than stocks with higher PEs u Supported by several academic studies u Conflicts directly with the CAPM, since study returns were risk-adjusted (Basu)

29 29 Low-Priced Stocks u Stocks with a “low” stock price earn higher returns than stocks with a “high” stock price u There is an optimum trading range u Every stock with a “high” stock price should split

30 30 Small Firm Effect u Investing in firms with low market capitalization will provide superior risk- adjusted returns u Supported by academic studies u Implies that portfolio managers should give small firms particular attention

31 31 Neglected Firm Effect u Security analysts do not pay as much attention to firms that are unlikely portfolio candidates u Implies that neglected firms may offer superior risk-adjusted returns

32 32 Market Overreaction u The tendency for the market to overreact to extreme news Investors may be able to predict systematic price reversals u Results because people often rely too heavily on recent data at the expense of the more extensive set of prior data

33 33 January Effect u Stock returns are inexplicably high in January u Small firms do better than large firms early in the year u Especially pronounced for the first five trading days in January

34 34 January Effect (cont’d) u Possible explanations: Tax-loss trading late in December (Branch) The risk of small stocks is higher early in the year (Rogalski and Tinic)

35 35 Types of Firms in January January return January return minus average monthly return in rest of year January return after adjusting for systematic risk S&P 500 Companies Highly Researched2.48%1.63%-1.44% Moderately Researched 4.95%4.19%1.69% Neglected7.62%6.87%5.03% Non-S&P 500 Companies Neglected11.32%10.72%7.71%

36 36 Day-of-the-Week Effect u Mondays are historically bad days for the stock market u Wednesday and Fridays are consistently good u Tuesdays and Thursdays are a mixed bag

37 37 Day-of-the-Week Effect (cont’d) u Should not occur in an efficient market Once a profitable trading opportunity is identified, it should disappear u The day-of-the-week effect continues to persist

38 38 Turn-of-the-Calendar Effect u The bulk of returns comes from the last trading day of the month and the first few days of the following month u For the rest of the month, the ups and downs approximately cancel out


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