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Who agrees with this hypothesis??
I'm interested to know as I recently completed an essay on the subject.
Who agrees with this hypothesis??
I'm interested to know as I recently completed an essay on the subject.
Years ago Warren Buffet wrote a rebuttal to the efficient market hypothesis, Mainly because the proponents of it at the time were saying Warrens fabulous long term record is due to luck, not skill.
Here is the rebuttal, its actually a good read. it's 13 pages, but its freezing outside, So make a Milo and enjoy
http://www4.gsb.columbia.edu/null?&exclusive=filemgr.download&file_id=522
http://www4.gsb.columbia.edu/null?&exclusive=filemgr.download&file_id=522
Please find attached the 'factor return' from Ken French for 'VALUE' (it is known as HML - High minus Low) and represents the return on a self funding long-short portfolio which is long stocks with low P/B and short the converse after controlling for certain other factors. This is not exactly what Buffett was referring to, but is in line with the concept of investing with a value tilt and this producing sustained profits over time (albeit that the concept is having a bit of a rest lately). It is entirely a different matter as to whether this chart actually supports or refutes EMH.
In my view, EMH is an artificial construct for laboratory purposes - much as CAPM, MPT, Neo-Keynesian economics...just don't tell Gene Fama.
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The hypothesis is just that. It is useful in explaning certain situations. It is also useful as a sanity check against your own investment assumptions etc.
A simple illustration is this... EMH would suggest that you'd never find a $100 note sitting in the middle of a busy footpath...because someone else would have picked it up already. Clearly, EMH didn't apply to that "someone" who happened to pick it up.
At the same time, if you build a buisness plan around picking up $100 notes on footpaths, EMH suggests you won't be too profitable. So it'd be correct in this instance.
1. Just googled and it seems $1 invested in the S&P500 in 1940 returns around $1,000 in 2010. So that might support the EMH.
2. However, though haven't read the study you're referring to so don't know how they construct the portfolio, e.g. do they short as in bet against high P/B stocks or just ignore it?
3. But the long-short portfolio as an argument, either for or against the EMH, seems a case of straw-manning the value/fundamental investor.
4. I think investor not throwing darts look at other things than just P/B.
1. It doesn't say anything about EMH.
2. Pls refer to the original post you are commenting on.
3. It isn't.
4. Naturally.
The market will be efficient if it run by robots but once you have human involve
it changes everything.
1. Could be use to say something about EMH: That a portfolio was constructed through research (look for P/B ratio and act accordingly, rather than merely invest in an index, and has returned much lower than the general market over time);
3. If the long-short portfolio model WERE to be used as an example of not indexing, not believing in EMH... then that's can be seen as saying, see, the Buffett wanna-be thought they could beat the market... and them value hunters look at price to book stocks and look what that brought them.
1.The portfolio shown was long-short. It has no gross market exposure. You compare this to a long only index portfolio and want to say that it says something about EMH? All the best.
3. The return to SML may or may not be driven by the tenants of EMH. The core of the debate has no names attached to the returns generated or wannabes looking for their autographs. There is no straw man. The debate would exist even in Buffett did not exist. There is an observation that this takes place. Certain explanations have to be true for EMH to be supported. It is arguable that it is supported, but there are very strong arguments that this is not entirely true. A rising SML doesn't mean anything for EMH on its own.
I'm pretty sure i understand what you meant by the long-short portfolio, that, as you said, buy stocks with low P/B and sell [short] those with high P/B and the results is in the chart you provided: Return from US Equity for that long-short portfolio where $1 invested now return $100.
Like I said, I haven't read that research and so my understanding could be wrong.
But if it is right, a chart I saw on returns on S&P500 over similar timeframe was 1 to 1000. ... ahhh... OK, got you.
You just got your Pass re-stated to HD.
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