Market Efficiency vs. Behavorial Finance: Difference between revisions
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*There are a handful of funds that outperform a broad index of stock, however, there is no way to tell in advance which ones these are going to be. | *There are a handful of funds that outperform a broad index of stock, however, there is no way to tell in advance which ones these are going to be. | ||
*When there is an imperfection in the market, lots of people see it and act on it, which is why it is so hard to beat the market. | |||
==Behavioral Finance== | ==Behavioral Finance== |
Revision as of 23:35, 30 April 2007
Market Efficiency
- Market Efficieny says that the market occasionally gets things wrong, but it is 90% efficient.
- Something may be statistically significant but not economically significant, so you cannot profit off the information.
- There is a little bit of predictability as to when returns are going to be high or low, but not enough to do the investor any good because no one can predict the exact point when markets will turn.
- There are a handful of funds that outperform a broad index of stock, however, there is no way to tell in advance which ones these are going to be.
- When there is an imperfection in the market, lots of people see it and act on it, which is why it is so hard to beat the market.
Behavioral Finance
- Dick Thaler, a behavioralist at the University of Chicago, believes that markets could be 90% inefficient.
- According to Sendhil Mullainathan, "If we know that there's a bus coming down the road sometime, but we just don't know when, we'll probably take a very different attitude toward waiting for the bus than if we have no idea whether there will ever be a bus. If the market is overvalued, and if I have a long enough horizon, I might simply decide to be a lot less aggressive in equities because I don't want to get nailed in one short, big drop."
Random Walk | Efficient-Market Hypothesis | Fundamental Analysis | Technical Analysis | Non-Random Walk Theory | Market Efficiency vs. Behavioral Finance