Top Banner
The Efficient Market Hypothesis and Its Critics Burton G. Malkiel (2003) Presented by: Septian Bayu K. 0806479080
18

The Efficient Market Hypothesis and Its Critics Burton G. Malkiel (2003)

Feb 08, 2016

Download

Documents

enya

The Efficient Market Hypothesis and Its Critics Burton G. Malkiel (2003). Presented by: Septian Bayu K. 0806479080. Outline. Introduction A Nonrandom Walk Down Wall Street Predictable Pattern Based on Valuation Parameters - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: The Efficient Market Hypothesis and Its Critics Burton G.  Malkiel  (2003)

The Efficient Market Hypothesis and Its Critics

Burton G. Malkiel (2003)

Presented by:Septian Bayu K. 0806479080

Page 2: The Efficient Market Hypothesis and Its Critics Burton G.  Malkiel  (2003)

Outline

• Introduction• A Nonrandom Walk Down Wall Street• Predictable Pattern Based on Valuation

Parameters• Cross-Sectional Predictable Patterns Based on

Firm Characteristics and Valuation Parameters• Seeming Irrefutable Cases of Inefficiency• The performance of Professional Investors• Conclusion

Page 3: The Efficient Market Hypothesis and Its Critics Burton G.  Malkiel  (2003)

Introduction

• Accepting EMH• EMH and random walk• Intellectual dominance• Paper examination

Page 4: The Efficient Market Hypothesis and Its Critics Burton G.  Malkiel  (2003)

A Nonrandom Walk Down Wall Street

• Short term momentum, including underreaction to new information

• Long run return reversal• Seasonal and day-of-the-week patterns

Page 5: The Efficient Market Hypothesis and Its Critics Burton G.  Malkiel  (2003)

Predictable Patterns Based on Valuation Parameters (1)

• Predicting future returns from initial dividends yields (exhibit 1.1)

• Predicting market returns from initial price-earnings multiples (exhibit 1.2)

• Other predictable time series patterns

Page 6: The Efficient Market Hypothesis and Its Critics Burton G.  Malkiel  (2003)

Predictable Patterns Based on Valuation Parameters (2)

• Exhibit 1.1

Page 7: The Efficient Market Hypothesis and Its Critics Burton G.  Malkiel  (2003)

Predictable Patterns Based on Valuation Parameters (3)

• Exhibit 1.2

Page 8: The Efficient Market Hypothesis and Its Critics Burton G.  Malkiel  (2003)

Cross-Sectional Predictable Patterns Based on Firm Characteristics and Valuation Parameters (1)

• The size effect (exhibit 2)• Value stocks (exhibit 3)• The equity risk premium puzzle• Summarizing the “anomalies” and predictable

patterns

Page 9: The Efficient Market Hypothesis and Its Critics Burton G.  Malkiel  (2003)

Cross-Sectional Predictable Patterns Based on Firm Characteristics and Valuation Parameters (2)

• Exhibit 2

Page 10: The Efficient Market Hypothesis and Its Critics Burton G.  Malkiel  (2003)

Cross-Sectional Predictable Patterns Based on Firm Characteristics and Valuation Parameters (3)

• Exhibit 3

Page 11: The Efficient Market Hypothesis and Its Critics Burton G.  Malkiel  (2003)

Seemingly Irrefutable Cases of Inefficiency

• The market crash of October 1987• The internet bubble of the late 1990s• Other illustrations of irrational pricing

Page 12: The Efficient Market Hypothesis and Its Critics Burton G.  Malkiel  (2003)

The Performance of Professional Investors (1)

• Exhibit 4

Page 13: The Efficient Market Hypothesis and Its Critics Burton G.  Malkiel  (2003)

The Performance of Professional Investors (2)

• Exhibit 5

Page 14: The Efficient Market Hypothesis and Its Critics Burton G.  Malkiel  (2003)

The Performance of Professional Investors (3)

• Exhibit 6

Page 15: The Efficient Market Hypothesis and Its Critics Burton G.  Malkiel  (2003)

The Performance of Professional Investors (4)

• Exhibit 7

Page 16: The Efficient Market Hypothesis and Its Critics Burton G.  Malkiel  (2003)

The Performance of Professional Investors (5)

• Exhibit 8

Page 17: The Efficient Market Hypothesis and Its Critics Burton G.  Malkiel  (2003)

The Performance of Professional Investors (6)

• Exhibit 9

Page 18: The Efficient Market Hypothesis and Its Critics Burton G.  Malkiel  (2003)

Conclusion

• Market cannot be perfectly efficient• Whatever patterns or irrationalities, they are

unlikely to persist would not provide extraordinary returns for investor