Efficient market and Efficient market hypothesis: Difference between pages

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''Economics - markets.''
(EMH).  


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.
The hypothesis that markets operate efficiently; that assets are fairly priced by the market mechanism to incorporate available information.  There are three forms of potential efficiency: the weak form, the semi-strong form and the strong form.


The <u>weak form</u> states that past prices are no guide to future prices, so charting techniques cannot be used to make excess returns.
The <u>semi-strong form</u> states that prices react to public information so that any form of analysis using publicly available information cannot be successful in consistently generating excess returns.
The <u>strong form</u> states that even insider information cannot generate consistent excess returns.
Important implications of the efficient market hypothesis for financial managers include:
o Keeping the financial markets well-informed.
o Taking market price movements seriously.
o Not attempting to 'fine tune' the timing of security issues.
Also known as the Efficient markets hypothesis.


== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Arbitrage]]
* [[Efficiency]]
* [[Capital asset pricing model]]
* [[Efficient market]]
* [[Demand]]
* [[Interest rate parity]]
* [[Efficient market hypothesis]]
* [[Perfect competition]]
* [[Externality]]
* [[Semi-strong market efficiency]]
* [[Free market]]
* [[Strong form efficiency]]
* [[Market]]
* [[Weak form efficiency]]
* [[Market mechanism]]
* [[Retail]]
* [[Supply]]
* [[Transparency]]
* [[Wholesale]]
* [[X-inefficiency]]
 
[[Category:The_business_context]]
[[Category:Financial_products_and_markets]]

Revision as of 20:23, 13 August 2013

(EMH).

The hypothesis that markets operate efficiently; that assets are fairly priced by the market mechanism to incorporate available information. There are three forms of potential efficiency: the weak form, the semi-strong form and the strong form.

The weak form states that past prices are no guide to future prices, so charting techniques cannot be used to make excess returns.

The semi-strong form states that prices react to public information so that any form of analysis using publicly available information cannot be successful in consistently generating excess returns.

The strong form states that even insider information cannot generate consistent excess returns.

Important implications of the efficient market hypothesis for financial managers include: o Keeping the financial markets well-informed. o Taking market price movements seriously. o Not attempting to 'fine tune' the timing of security issues.

Also known as the Efficient markets hypothesis.

See also