It is a market where current prices reflect/incorporate all available information.

Similar documents
MBF2253 Modern Security Analysis

Chapter 13. Efficient Capital Markets and Behavioral Challenges

PAPER No.14 : Security Analysis and Portfolio Management MODULE No.24 : Efficient market hypothesis: Weak, semi strong and strong market)

CHAPTER 13 EFFICIENT CAPITAL MARKETS AND BEHAVIORAL CHALLENGES

Expectations are very important in our financial system.

CHAPTER 6. Are Financial Markets Efficient? Copyright 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.

Economics of Money, Banking, and Fin. Markets, 10e

CHAPTER 12: MARKET EFFICIENCY AND BEHAVIORAL FINANCE

Chapter 7 The Stock Market, the Theory of Rational Expectations, and the Efficient Markets Hypothesis

Lectures 11 Foundations of Finance

COMM 324 INVESTMENTS AND PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT ASSIGNMENT 2 Due: October 20

Efficient Capital Markets

AFM 371 Winter 2008 Chapter 14 - Efficient Capital Markets

A Random Walk Down Wall Street

Derivation of zero-beta CAPM: Efficient portfolios

In this model, the value of the stock today is the present value of the expected cash flows (equal to one dividend payment plus a final sales price).

Efficient capital markets. Skema Business School. Portfolio Management 1. Course Outline

Behavioral Finance 1-1. Chapter 2 Asset Pricing, Market Efficiency and Agency Relationships

6. The Efficient Market Hypothesis

ECON 459 Game Theory. Lecture Notes Auctions. Luca Anderlini Spring 2017

Institutional Finance Financial Crises, Risk Management and Liquidity

Copyright 2009 Pearson Education Canada

Monetary Economics Efficient Markets and Alternatives. Gerald P. Dwyer Fall 2015

Institutional Finance Financial Crises, Risk Management and Liquidity

University of Pennsylvania The Wharton School

EFFICIENT MARKETS HYPOTHESIS

ECMC49S Midterm. Instructor: Travis NG Date: Feb 27, 2007 Duration: From 3:05pm to 5:00pm Total Marks: 100

Market efficiency, questions 1 to 10

Market efficiency definitions (I)

MARKET EFFICIENCY & MUTUAL FUNDS

Chapter 6 Investment Analysis and Portfolio Management

The Efficient Market Hypothesis

Stock Market Behavior - Investor Biases

Lecture 5: Active versus Passive Asset Management

P1.T1. Foundations of Risk Management Zvi Bodie, Alex Kane, and Alan J. Marcus, Investments, 10th Edition Bionic Turtle FRM Study Notes

CHAPTER 11. The Efficient Market Hypothesis INVESTMENTS BODIE, KANE, MARCUS. Copyright 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

Response to the QCA approach to setting the risk-free rate

FNCE 317, Economic Markets H Guy Williams, 2006

Algorithmic Trading Session 4 Trade Signal Generation II Backtesting. Oliver Steinki, CFA, FRM

15 Week 5b Mutual Funds

Chapter 1 Microeconomics of Consumer Theory

INDIVIDUAL AND HOUSEHOLD WILLINGNESS TO PAY FOR PUBLIC GOODS JOHN QUIGGIN

NorthPost Partners, LP

Stock Market Basics. Capital Market A market for intermediate or long-term debt or corporate stocks.

Portfolio Analysis with Random Portfolios

Chapter 33: Public Goods

Economics 109 Practice Problems 1, Vincent Crawford, Spring 2002

Microeconomic Theory August 2013 Applied Economics. Ph.D. PRELIMINARY EXAMINATION MICROECONOMIC THEORY. Applied Economics Graduate Program

QF206 Week 11. Part 2 Back Testing Case Study: A TA-Based Example. 1 of 44 March 13, Christopher Ting

Models of Asset Pricing

How to Fix the Top 10 Fatal Errors of Trading One Flaw at a Time. April 14: #4 Unrealistic Expectations. From the Active Trend Trader

The Fallacy behind Investor versus Fund Returns (and why DALBAR is dead wrong)

Global Imbalances. January 23rd

Stulz, Governance, Risk Management and Risk-Taking in Banks

The Scheid Group at Morgan Stanley

Chapter 9. Technical Analysis & Market Efficiency. Technical Analysis. Market Volume Kaplan Financial. Market volume 9-1

Efficient Market Hypothesis & Behavioral Finance

Setting the Ground for Business Success

Slide 3: What are Policy Analysis and Policy Options Analysis?

The Fallacy of Large Numbers and A Defense of Diversified Active Managers

Pindyck and Rubinfeld, Chapter 17 Sections 17.1 and 17.2 Asymmetric information can cause a competitive equilibrium allocation to be inefficient.

Some Notes on Value Creation and Market Efficiency

Chapter 19 Optimal Fiscal Policy

Investment Education Series

Name. FINAL EXAM, Econ 171, March, 2015

Math 140 Introductory Statistics

Module 3: Factor Models

Efficiency and Herd Behavior in a Signalling Market. Jeffrey Gao

Investment Advisory Whitepaper

Senior Finance Seminar (FIN 4385) Market Efficiency

CUR 412: Game Theory and its Applications, Lecture 11

Chapter 10: Mixed strategies Nash equilibria, reaction curves and the equality of payoffs theorem

Popular Exit Strategies The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly

How To Use S&P 500 Futures To Get A Heads Up On Stock Price Action By Tsutae Kamada

Microeconomic Theory II Preliminary Examination Solutions

The Fallacy of Large Numbers

Arbitrage Pricing. What is an Equivalent Martingale Measure, and why should a bookie care? Department of Mathematics University of Texas at Austin

So we turn now to many-to-one matching with money, which is generally seen as a model of firms hiring workers

MAIN TYPES OF INFORMATION ASYMMETRY (names from insurance industry jargon)

Seven Trading Mistakes to Say Goodbye To. By Mark Kelly KNISPO Solutions Inc.

In real economies, people still want to hold fiat money eventhough alternative assets seem to offer greater rates of return. Why?

ECON Microeconomics II IRYNA DUDNYK. Auctions.

CHAPTER 16 The Dividend Controversy. 1. Newspaper exercise; answers will vary depending on the stocks chosen.

Answer FOUR questions out of the following FIVE. Each question carries 25 Marks.

CHAPTER 17 INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT. by Alistair Byrne, PhD, CFA

Module 4: Market Efficiency

The Stock Market Mishkin Chapter 7:Part B (pp )

ACCA. Paper F9. Financial Management June Revision Mock Answers

Day 3. Myerson: What s Optimal

Risky asset valuation and the efficient market hypothesis

Problem Set 5 Answers

Notes for Section: Week 7

2. Aggregate Demand and Output in the Short Run: The Model of the Keynesian Cross

Risk and Return and Portfolio Theory

University of California, Davis Department of Economics Giacomo Bonanno. Economics 103: Economics of uncertainty and information PRACTICE PROBLEMS

Stock Market Forecast: Chaos Theory Revealing How the Market Works March 25, 2018 I Know First Research

Answers to chapter 3 review questions

Lesson XI: Market Efficiency and FX. Forecasting

Let Diversification Do Its Job

B. Arbitrage Arguments support CAPM.

Transcription:

ECMC49S Market Efficiency Hypothesis Practice Questions Date: Mar 29, 2006 [1] How to define an efficient market? It is a market where current prices reflect/incorporate all available information. [2] Describe the 3 forms of efficient market hypothesis. [a] Weak-form: Prices already reflect all PAST information. [b] Semi-strong form: Prices not only reflect the history of prices but all publicly available information. [c] Strong from: Prices reflect all available information, regardless of them being public or private/insider. [3] Does market efficiency mean you can randomly pick stocks from a stock exchange to form your portfolio? As I said in class, all that the market efficiency hypothesis implies is that prices should be correct signals because it has already incorporated all available information. But that does not mean your preference is totally irrelevant in making your investment decision. You may have specific situation to deal with. It may be your family issue, your age, your inherent risk preference, your career, your tax bracket, your film-making dream, etc. Thus, there is a need to optimize your portfolio so that you maximize your happiness. A simplified version of such a complicated optimization decision suggests you pick a risk-level that you would be willing to bear. What accounts for a risk-level then? It is the systematic risk that you are willing to be exposed to. That means diversifying away non-systematic risk is a must. Randomly picking stocks neither guarantee you an appropriate portfolio risk-level you want to bear, nor guarantee you a well-diversified portfolio. The list of reasons to support portfolio management is long. Try to think of more. And I am inclined to hear non-academic answers without any economic jargons. [4] What does it mean by the price you pay for a stock is fair? That means the prices has already incorporated all available information. As of this moment, the price you pay is justified. [5] List some of the implications of efficient market hypothesis. 1

Again, the list of implications here is not confined to what you have learnt in this course. You should try to think of more implications. Among many of the implications, some are more obvious. For example, prices movement should be unpredictable because prices should only reflect relevant new information. Professional investors may not systematically outperform individual investors. Technical analysis, like those done by chartists, cannot benefit you by figuring out any sure-win trading strategy. Etc. [6] If securities markets are efficient, what is the NPV of any security, regardless of its risk? NPV = 0, because what you pay should be what you are expected to get in an efficient market. [7] The efficient market hypothesis implies that abnormal returns are expected to be zero. Yet in order for markets to be efficient, arbitrageurs must be able to force prices back into equilibrium. If they earn profits in doing so, is this fact inconsistent with market efficiency? There is nothing in the efficient market hypothesis that implies arbitrageurs cannot make profits. But it is important to look at their net economic profits rather than their accounting profits. By economic profits I mean we have to subtract the opportunity costs from the gross profits. Costs include the cost of gathering information and a fair rate of return on physical and human capital. Also, it is important to distinguish between net expected economic profits. Efficient market hypothesis expect, at the margin, the net expected economic profits is zero. If an arbitrageurs were able to make net positive economic profits in a consistent basis for a long period of time, more individuals would have entered the arbitrage business until such situation become close to impossible to happen again. This is precisely the competition force that drives down the economic profit. In first year, we always wondered why any firm would exist in a perfectly competitive market if everyone would be making zero profit. In some sense, this question inquiries the same rationale. [8] Given the following situations, determine in each case whether or not the hypothesis of an efficient capital market (semi-strong form) is violated. a) Through the introduction of an advanced computer software into the analysis of past stock price movements, a brokerage firm is able to predict price movements well enough to earn a consistent 2% profit, adjusted for risk, above normal market returns. This question requires you to distinguish net versus gross profits. As a rational investor, you should ask the cost of acquiring needed information. If the computer costs exceed the excess 2

2 percent profits from the stocks, the firm is actually earning worse than normal returns. If the total cost including computer costs plus brokerage fee and all other transaction costs is less than 2 percent, then semi-strong form market efficiency hypothesis may be rejected. b) On average, investors in the stock market this year are expected to earn a positive return (profit) on their investment. Some investors will earn considerably more than others. On average the stock market provides a positive return. This does not contradict with the market being efficient or not. This is considered a normal return. The fact that ended up some investors did better than others just merely reflect the result of uncertainty in stock returns. Given any probability distribution, some observations will lie above the mean and some will lie below. The expected returns do not have to coincident with the actual realized returns all the time. If it were coincident all the time, we would not have uncertainty to deal with at all. c) You have discovered that the square root of any given stock price multiplied by the day of the month provides an indication of the direction in price movement of that particular stock with a probability of 75% This violates the semi-strong form market efficiency hypothesis. d) An Ontario Securities Commission (OSC) suit was filed against ATI in 2003. ATI s founder and chairman Mr. Kwok Yuen Ho and his wife Betty Ho were accused of avoiding almost $CAD 7 million in losses and maximizing charitable tax benefits by selling or donating ATI shares ahead of a May 2000 profit warning. The semi-strong form of market efficiency hypothesis assumes publicly available information is instantaneously incorporated into prices. Thus benefits from insider information are possible. In the above example, strong-form is rejected but not semi-strong form. [9] You just got hired by an investment advisory firm. After a successful trading day, you go for a drink with your boss. At the pub, you argue strongly for the strong form of the efficient market hypothesis. Your boss s eyes narrow, and you begin to get nervous. What is the issue here? Because expressing your opinion right in front of him is of no difference from bluntly telling him that he has no value. And the fact that he hired you was also damn stupid. You also implicitly say that all that he has achieved so far was purely based on luck and nothing related to his talent. If strong-form 3

market efficiency hypothesis holds, those who acquire insider information quickly act on it and force the prices to reflect the information. Hence efforts to seek out insider information are futile. The process of seeking ways to beat the market is also futile. Professional investors have little value. [10] The law strictly forbids insider trading. There has been regular prosecution against individuals who have traded with insider information about their own firms. What conclusion can you draw from this, and how does this information affect which form of the market efficiency hypothesis you might adopt? That may imply the strong-form market efficiency hypothesis probably does not hold. [11] If the weak-form market efficiency hypothesis is valid, what do the security prices reflect? All information you can acquire from the history. [12] Assume the computer technology is so advanced that the market, as confirmed by numerous unbiased studies, have been shown to be efficient. Investment firms therefore have decided to retire all the portfolio managers and financial analysts and let random choice govern the security selection process. What mistake is implicit in this action? The mistake is the omission that the efficiency of market is actually based upon the continuing services of the analysts to actively scout the market. If there is no analyst left, the prices will definitely not reflect all the available information. Think of the analogy of a perfectly competitive product market again. If everyone s making zero profit that s why some will exit. Then profit quickly become positive and some new firms enter to try to earn the positive profit again until another equilibrium with no profit is achieved. If you can link this analogy with the efficient market hypothesis, you are doing very well. [13] What would happen to market efficiency if all investors follow a passive buy-and-hold investment strategy? Sooner or later prices will fail to reflect new information. At this point there are profit/arbitrage opportunities for active investors who uncover mispriced securities. [14] Suppose you observed that companys CEOs make abnormally high returns on investments in their own company s stock. Would this invalidate the weak-form efficiency market hypothesis? Would this invalidate the strong-form efficiency market hypothesis? 4

High-level managers might well have insider information about their own firms. Their ability to realize profits based on their insider information is not surprising. It does not violate the weak-form market efficiency hypothesis, but it does violate the strong-form. [15] Does weak-form efficiency market hypothesis implies strong-form efficiency market hypothesis? What about the reverse? Strong-form EMH implies semi-strong form and weak form holds. Semi-strong form holds also implies weak-form holds, but not the reverse. To understand these relationships, we should be able to tell the entire sets of information used in the strong-form also includes the set of information used in semi-strong form and weak-form. But the set of information used in weak-form does not include the entire sets of information for either the semi-strong form or the strong-form. [16] Suppose Wal-Mart announced today morning that its profit from last quarter has dropped 15% compared to the previous quarter, Wal-Mart s closing price today was up 2% from yesterday. Is this evidence against the efficiency market hypothesis? It is not. There are two reasons. First, the 15% drop may be a positive news if the general public expected a worse drop before the announcement. Second, except for the piece of news, there may be some other news simultaneously affecting Wal-Mart s future performance, e.g., consumer confidence becoming stronger, etc. So it is hard to isolate one single event s effect on the stock price. Since it is so hard to isolate one event from other, that s why in any event study, we rely on a big sample of firms. If there is only one firm or a few firms in the sample, it is likely that we cannot isolate the event that we want to study from all other events that simultaneously affect share prices of those firms in the sample. 5