Mppa Efficient Market Portfolio
Mppa Efficient Market Portfolio
Mppa Efficient Market Portfolio
A. INTRODUCTION
Market efficiency is a description of how prices in competitive markets respond to new
information. An efficient capital market is one whereby at any given time security prices
adjust rapidly to the arrival of new information and, therefore, the current prices of
securities reflect all the available information about the security. It s a market where there
are large numbers of rational, profit maximising investors actively competing, trying to
predict future market values of individual securities, and where important current
information is readily and freely available to all participants.
Assumptions
Stock prices are determined solely by forces of demand and supply.
There are large numbers of profit-maximising participants analysing and valuing
securities, each independently of the other.
New information regarding securities comes to the market in a random fashion
each generally independent of the others, and
Investors adjust security prices rapidly to reflect the effect of new information.
Investors can be confident that asset prices fully reflect all available information and are
consistent with the risk involved. For example if Intel announces that it has invented a
new way of manufacturing computer chips that will make computers run 10 times faster
at half the cost, and that it will take at least a year to be implemented in all their
manufacturing plants. In an efficient market this would imply that the stock prices will
immediately rise after the announcement (i.e when the information is available not a year
later when the technology is implemented or even later when extra profits are received)
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Weak Form EMH
The weak-Form EMH assumes that current stock prices fully reflect all security-market
information, including the historical sequence of prices, rates of return, trading volume
data and other market information.
It therefore, implies that the past rates of returns and other market data should have no
relationship with future rates of return should be independent). You should hardly gain
from any trading rule that decides whether to buy or sell a security based on past rates of
return or any other past market data. This implies that under this form of market,
technical analysis is of no value.
However, the risk here is that these directors, managers and professional advisors would
use their greater degree of knowledge about a company to trade on the capital markets.
As they have information that is not generally available, they would have a much better
chance of trading successfully. This is known as "insider dealing" and is seen as being a
misuse of the capital markets.
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The strong form encompasses both the weak form EMH and the semi-strong form EMH.
In addition, all information is cost-free and available to everyone at the same time.
Technical analysts
The Technical analysts believe the principle that stock prices tend to move in trends.
They assume that a stock that is rising will continue rising and that that is stagnant will
remain stagnant. These analysts (at times called chartists) are traders not long term
investors. Clearly their assumptions of technical analysis directly oppose the notion of
efficient markets. Technicians hypothesise that stock prices move to a new equilibrium
after the release of new information in a gradual manner, which causes trends in stock
price movements that persist for certain periods. This belief contradicts with the
advocates of the EMH who believe that security prices adjust to new information very
rapidly. EMH advocates do not claim that prices adjust perfectly - which means there is a
chance of over-adjustment or under-adjustment. Still because it is not certain whether the
market will over or under-adjust at any time you cannot derive abnormal profits from
adjustment errors.
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Fundamental analysts
The Fundamentalists believe the market to be 90% logical and 10% psychological. Their
major objective is to establish the proper value of a security. This intrinsic value is related
to the growth of the company, dividend payout, interest rates and risk. Depending on
whether the Intrinsic value is less or greater than the market value this will determine the
investors buy and hold or sell decision. The fundamentalists constantly look for under
priced stocks. Accordingly the market will in the short run adjust itself to equilibrium.
With regard to aggregate market analysis, the EMH implies that if you examine only past
economic events it is unlikely to help you out perform a buy-and-hold policy because the
market adjusts rapidly to known economic events. A fundamental analyst relying on only
historical data will not experience superior risk-adjusted returns. The market is close to
semi efficient.
The EMH does not contradict the value of aggregate market, industry or company
analysis but implies that you need to (i) understand the relevant variables that affect rates
of return and (ii) do a superior job of estimating movements in the valuation variables.
Some strong form tests have shown the likely existence of superior analysts. For
example, price adjustments that usually follow the publication of analysts
recommendations point to the existence of superior analysts.
We know the relevant variables that the fundamental analysts should analyse and all the
important techniques they use but actually estimating the relevant variables is as much as
an art and a product of hard work as it is a science. If the estimates could be done on the
basis of a mechanical formula one could program a computer to do it, and there would be
no need for analysts. Thus the superior analyst must understand what variables are
relevant to the valuation process and have the ability to do a superior job of estimating
these variables.
As noted above, studies have indicated that professional money managers cannot beat a
buy-and-hold policy on a risk-adjusted basis. One explanation is there are no superior
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analysts and the cost of research forces the results of merely adequate analysis into the
inferior category.
Another explanation, which has some empirical support, is that money management firms
employ both superior and inferior analysts and the gains from the recommendations of
the few superior analysts are offset by the costs and poor results due to the
recommendations of the inferior analysts. This raises the question should a portfolio be
managed actively or passively?
A portfolio manager with superior analysts can manage a portfolio actively looking for
undervalued securities and trading accordingly. Without superior analysts it only makes
sense and value to manage passively. Superior analysts need to concentrate on the second
tier of stocks. These stocks possess the liquidity required by institutional portfolio
managers, but because they do not receive the attention given the top-tier stocks, the
markets for these neglected stocks may be less efficient than the market for large well-
known stocks.
A portfolio manager without access to superior analysts needs a different procedure. First
the manager needs to measure the risk preferences of his/her clients, then build a
portfolio to match this risk level by investing a certain proportion of the portfolio in risky
assets and the rest in a risk-free asset. The manager must completely diversify the risky
asset portfolio on a global basis so it moves consistently with the world market.