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The Efficient Market Theory and Evidence - Implications for Active Investment Management (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,690
Discovery Miles 16 900
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The Efficient Market Theory and Evidence - Implications for Active Investment Management (Paperback)
Series: Foundations and Trends (R) in Finance
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Total price: R1,700
Discovery Miles: 17 000
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The efficient market theory asserts that the price of a security
reflects all available information about its fundamental value. A
consequence of the theory is that it is impossible to consistently
beat the market and speculation must be a loser's game. Hence, an
indexing strategy is bound to eventually beat a strategy that uses
active management, where active management is characterized as
trading that seeks to exploit mispriced assets. The Efficient
Market Theory and Evidence reviews the extensive theoretical and
empirical literature on the efficient markets hypothesis (EMH). The
authors base their review on the implications of the EMH for the
practice of active investment management. Beginning with a brief
discussion of current efficient market theory, the authors present
the theoretical foundation and discuss the recent empirical
evidence on efficiency as it pertains to a range of different
markets - not simply the large, liquid public securities markets
but also the private capital markets. The Efficient Market Theory
and Evidence suggests that while tests of the theory on prices have
produced violations suggestive of the potential for active
management to add value to a multi-asset portfolio, finding
consistent out-performing active managers is difficult. Since the
most recent versions of the EMH emphasize the comparative
advantages of specialized arbitrageurs due to better information,
skill, lower trading costs, and better access to financing, the
balance between indexation and active management is a choice that
depends on beliefs about the existence and potential of manager
skill, the pricing opportunities afforded within a given market,
the time preferences and risk aversion of the investor, and the
expertise and incentive contract of the specific manager.
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