Capital Financing Decision and Efficient Capital Markets Text : Chapter 13.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Efficient Market Hypothesis Reference: RWJ Chp 13
Advertisements

Chapter 3 Market Efficiency
Capital Market Efficiency The Empirics
13.1 Can Financing Decisions Create Value?
The Efficient Market Hypothesis
1 Efficient Market Theory Dr. Rana Singh Associate Professor
Corporate Financing Decisions Market Efficiency 1Finance - Pedro Barroso.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. Efficient Market Hypothesis 1.
Market Efficiency Chapter 10.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. The Efficient Market Hypothesis CHAPTER 8.
Corporate Financing Decisions and Efficient Capital Markets.
1 Fin 2802, Spring 10 - Tang Chapter 11: Market Efficiency Fina2802: Investments and Portfolio Analysis Spring, 2010 Dragon Tang Lecture 10 The Efficient.
QDai for FEUNL Finanças November 9. QDai for FEUNL Topics covered  Efficient market theory Definition Implications Foundation Types Evidence.
Efficient Capital Markets
© 2008 Pearson Education Canada7.1 Chapter 7 The Stock Market, the Theory of Rational Expectations, and the Efficient Markets Hypothesis.
Corporate Financing Decisions and Efficient Capital Markets
Chapter 10 Market Efficiency.
Corporate Financing Decisions and Efficient Capital Markets.
Market Efficiency Chapter 12. Do security prices reflect information ? Why look at market efficiency - Implications for business and corporate finance.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved CHAPTER 13 Corporate Financing Decisions and Efficient Capital.
Practical Investment Management
Efficient Capital Markets Two Views on Capital Market Efficiency: “... in price movements... the sum of every scrap of knowledge available to Wall Street.
7. Stock Market Valuation & the EMH Role of Expectations Rational Expectations Efficient Markets Theory Role of Expectations Rational Expectations Efficient.
CHAPTER NINE MARKET EFFICIENCY © 2001 South-Western College Publishing.
Corporate Finance Ronald F. Singer FINA 4330 Efficient Capital Markets Lecture 15 Fall 2010.
Efficient Market Hypothesis by Indrani Pramanick (44)
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. The Efficient Market Hypothesis CHAPTER 8.
Corporate Financing and Market Efficiency “If a man’s wit be wandering, let him study mathematics” – Francis Bacon, 1625.
Efficient Market Hypothesis The Empirics. 4 basic traits of efficiency An efficient market exhibits certain behavioral traits that becomes necessary conditions.
Efficient Capital Markets Objectives: What is meant by the concept that capital markets are efficient? Why should capital markets be efficient? What are.
Efficient Capital Markets
© 2008 Pearson Education Canada7.1 Chapter 7 The Stock Market, the Theory of Rational Expectations, and the Efficient Markets Hypothesis.
0 Corporate Financing Decisions and Efficient Capital Markets.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2004 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved Corporate Finance Ross  Westerfield  Jaffe Seventh Edition.
FIN 614: Financial Management Larry Schrenk, Instructor.
Market Efficiency. News and Returns All news, and announcements contain anticipated and unexpected components The market prices assets based on what is.
Market Efficiency.
Lecture Presentation Software to accompany Investment Analysis and Portfolio Management Seventh Edition by Frank K. Reilly & Keith C. Brown Chapter 6.
Chapter 12 Jones, Investments: Analysis and Management
Efficient Market Hypothesis EMH Presented by Inderpal Singh.
Chapter 12 The Efficient Market Hypothesis. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. Random Walk - stock prices.
COMM W. Suo Slide 1. COMM W. Suo Slide 2  Random Walk - stock price change unpredictably  Actually stock prices follow a positive trend.
Capital Markets and The Efficient Market Hypothesis 2BUS0197 – Financial Management Lecture 4 Francesca Gagliardi.
EMH- 0 Efficient Market Hypothesis Eugene Fama, 1964 A market where there are huge number of rational, profit-maximizers actively competing, with each.
Capital Markets Theory Lecture 5 International Finance.
The Theory of Capital Markets Rational Expectations and Efficient Markets.
Chapter 8 The Efficient Market Hypothesis. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. Efficient Market Hypothesis.
The Market Hypothesis The Efficient Market Hypothesis.
Investments, 8 th edition Bodie, Kane and Marcus Slides by Susan Hine McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights.
CHAPTER NINE MARKET EFFICIENCY Practical Investment Management Robert A. Strong.
The stock market, rational expectations, efficient markets, and random walks The Economics of Money, Banking, and Financial Markets Mishkin, 7th ed. Chapter.
The Efficient Market Hypothesis. Any informarion that could be used to predict stock performance should already be reflected in stock prices. –Random.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2001 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved Market Efficiency Chapter 11.
1 MBF 2263 Portfolio Management & Security Analysis Lecture 7 Efficient Market Hypothesis.
Alternative View of Risk and Return. Multi Factor Pricing Models Like CAPM, an asset’s return is related to common risks But we now allow for their to.
1 1 Ch11&12 – MBA 566 Efficient Market Hypothesis vs. Behavioral Finance Market Efficiency Random walk versus market efficiency Versions of market efficiency.
Market Efficiency. What is an efficient market? A market is efficient when it uses all available information to price assets.  Information is quickly.
 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1999 INVESTMENTS Fourth Edition Bodie Kane Marcus Irwin/McGraw-Hill 12-1 Market Efficiency Chapter 12.
Market Efficiency.
1 The Capital Markets and Market Efficiency. 2 Role of the Capital Markets Definition Economic Function Continuous Pricing Function Fair Price Function.
An Alternative View of Risk and Return The Arbitrage Pricing Theory.
EFFICIENT MARKET HYPOTHESIS
Chapter 10 Market Efficiency.
1 Lecture 12 The Stock Market, the Theory of Rational Expectations, and the Efficient Market Hypothesis.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. A market is efficient if prices “fully ______________” available information.
Chapter 9 Market Efficiency.
財務金融大數據分析 Big Data Analytics in Finance
Efficient Market Hypothesis The Empirics
Efficient Capital Markets and Behavioral Challenges
Presentation transcript:

Capital Financing Decision and Efficient Capital Markets Text : Chapter 13

EMH- 1 Can Financing Decisions Create Value? Earlier parts of the book show how to evaluate investment projects according to the NPV criterion. The next few chapters concern financing decisions, such as: –How much debt and equity to sell –When to sell debt and equity –When (or if) to pay dividends

EMH- 2 Creating Value through Financing 1.Fool Investors  Empirical evidence suggests that it is hard to fool investors consistently. 2.Reduce Costs or Increase Subsidies  Certain forms of financing have tax advantages or carry other subsidies. 3.Create a New Security  Sometimes a firm can find a previously-unsatisfied clientele and issue new securities at favorable prices.  In the long-run, this value creation is relatively small.

EMH- 3 Efficient Market Hypothesis Eugene Fama, 1964 A market where there are huge number of rational, profit-maximizers actively competing, with each trying to predict the future market values of individual securities, and where important current information is almost freely available to all participants.

EMH- 4 The Implication of EMH The EMH has implications for investors and firms. –Since information is reflected in security prices quickly, knowing information when it is released does an investor no good. –Firms should expect to receive the fair value for securities that they sell. Firms cannot profit from fooling investors in an efficient market. –What changes stock prices? New Information! –What do we mean by new information? To managers, major shareholders vs. other investors

EMH- 5 Reaction of Stock Price to New Information in Efficient and Inefficient Markets Stock Price Days before (-) and after (+) announcement Efficient market response to “good news” Overreaction to “good news” with reversion Delayed response to “good news”

EMH- 6 Reaction of Stock Price to New Information in Efficient and Inefficient Markets Stock Price Days before (-) and after (+) announcement Efficient market response to “bad news” Overreaction to “bad news” with reversion Delayed response to “bad news”

EMH- 7 Forms of Efficient Market Hypothesis Weak Form Efficient Market –Prices reflect information set of past prices –Is there any strong relationship between current and past returns? Semi-strong Form Efficient Market –Prices reflect publicly available information –Is there significant market reactions to public announcements? Strong Form Efficient Market –Prices reflect all information relevant to a stock –Is future price predictable?

EMH- 8 Weak Form Market Efficiency Security prices reflect all information found in past prices and volume. Often weak-form efficiency is represented as P t = P t-1 + Expected return + random error t If the weak form of market efficiency holds, then technical analysis is of no value. Since stock prices only respond to new information, which by definition arrives randomly, stock prices are said to follow a random walk.

EMH- 9 Random Walk Theory The movement of stock prices from day to day DO NOT reflect any pattern. Statistically speaking, the movement of stock prices is random (skewed positive over the long term).

EMH- 10 Past vs. Future Returns: Microsoft

EMH- 11 Past vs. Future Returns: Dow Jones Index

EMH- 12 Past vs. Future Returns: CAC Index

EMH- 13 Can past return predict future return? Fama(1965): 1st order autocorrelation (about.03) Fama and French (1986): Higher order autocorrleation is negative and even smaller Other variables help to explain longer term return –Dividend yield –E-P ratio –high-low grade bond yield spread

EMH- 14 Semi-strong EMH - Event studies Security Prices reflect all publicly available information. In M&A, average increase for the target firms’ stock price is about 15%, while the average daily return is only.04% Stock price seem to adjust within a day to event announcement

EMH- 15 Event Studies: How Tests Are Structured  Event Studies are one type of test of the semi- strong form of market efficiency. This form of the EMH implies that prices should reflect all publicly available information.  To test this, event studies examine prices and returns over time—particularly around the arrival of new information.  Test for evidence of under reaction, overreaction, early reaction, delayed reaction around the event.

EMH- 16 Event Studies: Dividend Omissions Efficient market response to “bad news” S.H. Szewczyk, G.P. Tsetsekos, and Z. Santout “Do Dividend Omissions Signal Future Earnings or Past Earnings?” Journal of Investing (Spring 1997)

EMH- 17 Some Interesting Results of Event Studies –New stock issue : (-3% usually) –Share Repurchase –Change of dividend –Stock split

EMH- 18 Event studies Change of accounting rule

EMH- 19 Strong-Form EMH One group of studies of strong-form market efficiency investigates insider trading. Buy-and-hold strategy beat most of the other strategy Portfolio performance of WSJ specialists vs. random selection Studies of Value Line –Adjusted for risk and size, G1 stocks have higher return than G5 stocks up to 1 year-horizon (Huberman and Kandel) –The announcement of G2 stocks change to G1 bring 2.44% permanent return over 3 days. (Stcikel, 1985) –The effect of rank change is stronger for small firms (Stcikel, 1985)

EMH- 20 Strong-form EMH : Mutual Fund

EMH- 21 The Record of Mutual Funds Taken from Lubos Pastor and Robert F. Stambaugh, “Evaluating and Investing in Equity Mutual Funds,” unpublished paper, Graduate School of Business, University of Chicago (March 2000).

EMH- 22 Strong-form EMH Mutual fund performance –Jensen (1969) , return to investors:1% lower per year than index (after management and other expense, but before loan fees) –Ippolito(1989) ,.83% per year above index –Experience of Taiwan vs. US –Problem of index choice

EMH- 23 Relationship among Three Different Information Sets All information relevant to a stock Information set of publicly available information Information set of past prices

EMH- 24 Evidence against EMH Stock Market Crash of 1987 –The market dropped between 20 percent and 25 percent on a Monday following a weekend during which little surprising information was released. Size effect Temporal Anomalies –January effect –Monday effect –Sunshine and full moon Speculative Bubbles –Sometimes a crowd of investors can behave as a single squirrel.

EMH- 25 Some Criticism Is EMH is testable? –Problem of joint testing between EMH and CAPM Does EMH suggest that we can randomly choose the components of portfolio, since the securities are always fairly priced?

EMH- 26 Implications for Financial Managers Markets have no memory –Do not expect historical moment will return –Can managers time the market? Trust the market price –Why are you smarter than thousands of million investors out there in the market? Reading the market price changes –The stock market reactions –The yield curve

EMH- 27 Implications for Financial Managers No financial illusion –Accounting change, Stock split Do it yourself alternative –Diversification, M&A