Showing posts with label EMH. Show all posts
Showing posts with label EMH. Show all posts

Thursday, June 22, 2017

22/6/17: Efficient Markets for H-bomb Fuel - 1954


For all the detractors of the EMH - the Efficient Markets Hypothesis - and for all its fans, as well as for any fan of economic history, this paper is a must-read: http://www.terry.uga.edu/media/events/documents/Newhard_paper-9-6-13.pdf.

Back in 1954, an economist, Armen A. Alchian, working at RAND conducted the world’s first event study. His study used stock market data, publicly available at the time, to infer which fissile fuel material was used in manufacturing highly secret H-bomb. That study was immediately withdrawn from public view. The paper linked above replicates Alchian's results.


Wednesday, November 4, 2015

4/11/15: About Those Corporate Earnings Surprises...


With earnings reporting season on, here is a very interesting and bold insight into what is happening in the markets: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-11-02/socgen-slams-the-corporate-cheating-season.

The gist of it is that "...investors can credit the robust equity market returns in October to "the charade that is quarterly company reporting."" In other words, Soc Gen analysts show that "corporate executives are able to lower the bar for what constitutes success since August 2008" so that "analyst upgrades relative to downgrades rise during periods in which many companies report earnings."

In simple terms, markets optimism is overhyped by artificial under-hyping at the estimates point in order to trigger positive surprise. And this comes on foot of massive equity buy-outs (often using debt) and other shenanigans. EMH, anyone?..

Which brings us to a perfect summary of the 'glass 1/10th full' the markets run on:


You can't make it up...

Monday, November 5, 2012

5/11/2012: Academic research and market efficiency


Fascinating article on both the issue of markets efficiency (pricing-in of newsflows) and the impact of herding via learning (triggered by academic research) in finance: here.

A nice addition to our discussions both in TCD and UCD courses.