Chapter 13: Investor Behavior and Capital Market Efficiency

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Chapter 13: Investor Behavior and Capital Market Efficiency -1 Chapter 13: Investor Behavior and Capital Market Efficiency Note: Only responsible for sections 13.1 through 13.6 Fundamental question: Is the market portfolio efficient? 13.1 Competition and Capital Markets A. Identifying a Stock s Alpha => if new information arrives and prices don t change, securities will fall off the securities market line (SML) => difference between expected return and required return (from SML) equals: α s = E[R s ] r s (13.2) where: rs = required return on s = r f + β s (E(R Mkt ) r f ) (13.1) Note: This is same as 12.1 and 10.11. B. Profiting from Non-Zero Alpha Stocks => investors rushing to buy positive alpha stocks and sell negative alpha stocks will drive the alphas to zero 1) price of positive alpha stocks will rise as investors buy them => as price rises, expected return (and alpha) drop 2) price of negative alpha stocks will fall as investors sell (or short-sell) them => as prices fall, expected return (and alpha) rises Note: It is possible that prices will correct before trading occurs => no one will be willing to sell positive alpha stocks or buy negative alpha stocks. Key question: How quickly does this correction occur? Concept check: 1

Chapter 13: Investor Behavior and Capital Market Efficiency -2 13.2 Information and Rational Expectations A. Informed vs. Uninformed Investors => informed investors will have to take advantage of uninformed investors that don t simply buy and sell market index funds B. Rational Expectations Rational expectations: all investors correctly interpret and use their own information as well as information that can be inferred from market prices or the trades of others. => for any investors to earn positive alphas, other investors must: 1. not have rational expectations so that mistakenly believe will earn positive alphas when actually earning negative alphas, or 2. care about something besides expected return and volatility Concept checks: both 13.3 The Behavior of Individual Investors A. Underdiversification and Portfolio Biases => evidence suggests that households are not well diversified: 1. hold few stocks 2. holdings often concentrated in same industry or are geographically close 3. hold stock in company work for B. Excessive Trading and Overconfidence => the market portfolio is passive and requires little rebalancing => stocks trade more often than CAPM suggests and individuals are particularly prone to active trading Note: returns reduced by transaction costs Reasons: 1. overconfidence bias: individuals tend to overestimate their knowledge and ability => trading seems to increase with overconfidence => men tend to be more overconfident and tend to trade more

Chapter 13: Investor Behavior and Capital Market Efficiency -3 2. sensation seeking: some individuals seek novel and risk-taking experiences => such risk-seeking individuals tend to trade more C. Individual Behavior and Market Prices => to make market inefficient, behavior of uninformed investors must be correlated => otherwise cancel out Concept checks: all 13.4 Systematic Trading Biases A. Hanging on to Losers and the Disposition Effect Disposition effect: investors tend to hang on to losers and sell winners => investors might be willing to take more risk if possible loss => investors reluctant to admit a mistake by taking a loss Downside of behavior: => higher taxes: selling winners creates taxable income but selling losers would reduce taxable income => losing stocks tend to underperform winners over the next year B. Investor Attention, Mood, and Experience 1. investors tend to buy stocks that have been in the news => advertising, high trading volume, extreme (positive or negative) returns 2. investors affected by mood => stock returns higher when sunny in New York City => stock returns worse in countries that lose world cup 3. investors put too much weight on own experience => people who grew up when stock returns high tend to invest more in stocks

Chapter 13: Investor Behavior and Capital Market Efficiency -4 C. Herd Behavior Herd behavior: tendency of investors to make similar trading errors as imitate other investors => leads to correlation between trading behavior by investors Reasons: 1. trying to follow lead of better informed investors 2. individuals don t want to underperform peers 3. professionals don t want to stray too far from peers D. Implications of Behavioral Biases => might be possible for sophisticated investors to profit from these biases Concept Checks: all 13.5 The Efficiency of the Market Portfolio Conditions for sophisticated investors to profit from mistakes by biases: 1. significant enough to move prices 2. limited competition to exploit mispricing A. Trading on News or Recommendations 1. Takeovers: price jumps enough at announcement that alpha gone 2. Stock Recommendations: stocks seem to overreact to buy recommendations (despite activity by short sellers) => no overreaction if news at same time B. The Performance of Fund Managers => on average, fund managers earn positive alphas before transaction costs => after transaction costs, average fund has negative alphas => positive alphas for funds in one year tend to not be repeated Reason: investors flock to good managers, but the more money a manager has to manage, the harder it is to find good opportunities C. The Winners and Losers => most individual investors should hold the market => professionals may earning extra return, but little of it is passed on to investors

Chapter 13: Investor Behavior and Capital Market Efficiency -5 Concept Checks: all 13.6 Style-Based Techniques and the Market Efficiency Debate A. Size Effects 1. Excess Return and Market Capitalization => small cap stocks have higher betas but have positive alphas => alphas for individual portfolios insignificantly different from zero => joint test of whether all 10 portfolios have zero alphas rejected 2. Excess Return and Book-to-Market Ratio Growth stocks: low book to market ratio Value stocks: high book to market ratio => value stocks tend to have higher betas but positive alphas => alphas of individual portfolios insignificantly different from zero => joint test of whether all 10 portfolios have zero alphas rejected 3. Size effects and Empirical Evidence B. Momentum Basic idea: securities with positive alphas will tend to have lower prices other things equal. => on average, low value securities (high book to market) should provide positive alphas => best performing stocks over prior 6-12 months have positive alphas over the next 3 12 months. C. Implications of Positive-Alpha Trading Strategies Two possibilities: 1. CAPM correct, but investors ignoring opportunities to earn extra return without extra risk => unaware of opportunities or costs exceed benefits Or,

Chapter 13: Investor Behavior and Capital Market Efficiency -6 2. Market portfolio is not efficient so that beta with respect to market does not capture risk a. Proxy error: market is efficient, but proxies we use (like S&P500) are not. b. Behavioral biases: biases push investors to hold inefficient portfolios c. Alternative Risk Preferences and Non-tradable Wealth: investors may choose inefficient portfolios because care about risks other than volatility of their traded portfolio. => most important risks associated with human capital Note: Section 13.7 (which we are skipping) derives models with more than one source of risk