Efficient market: Difference between revisions
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''Economics - markets.'' | |||
A market in which there is a sufficiently large number of buyers and sellers to eliminate arbitrage opportunities, and in which the trade off between risk and return is fully reflected in prevailing market prices. | A market in which there is a sufficiently large number of buyers and sellers to eliminate arbitrage opportunities, and in which the trade off between risk and return is fully reflected in prevailing market prices. | ||
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== See also == | == See also == | ||
* [[Arbitrage]] | * [[Arbitrage]] | ||
* [[Capital asset pricing model]] | |||
* [[Demand]] | |||
* [[Efficient market hypothesis]] | * [[Efficient market hypothesis]] | ||
* [[Externality]] | |||
* [[Free market]] | |||
* [[Market]] | |||
* [[Market mechanism]] | |||
* [[Retail]] | |||
* [[Supply]] | |||
* [[Transparency]] | * [[Transparency]] | ||
* [[Wholesale]] | |||
* [[X-inefficiency]] | * [[X-inefficiency]] | ||
[[Category:The_business_context]] | |||
[[Category:Financial_products_and_markets]] |
Revision as of 09:02, 8 April 2021
Economics - markets.
A market in which there is a sufficiently large number of buyers and sellers to eliminate arbitrage opportunities, and in which the trade off between risk and return is fully reflected in prevailing market prices.