Bubbles and Crashes Flashcards
What was Shiller’s (1981) ‘excess volatility’ argument?
That stock prices were far more volatile than the EMH could justify (ie. given fluctuations in dividends, stock prices seem to be overvolatile!)
Thought that if dividends didn’t fluctuate too much then stock prices shouldn’t either!
When are crashes justified by the EMH?
If there is ‘drastic’ news (often there isn’t drastic news but crashes happen tf against EMH!)
See
panopto 3-9mins
2 explanations of overvaluation?
1) calendar anomalies (see prev.)
2) Success of ‘momentum’ strategies: evidence shows that stocks that have done well in past 6 months do better in the next 6 months than those who have done poorly in last 6 months
What did schliefer hypothesise? What has been observed
That the price of a share should not be affected by it being moved into or out of an index since FV hasn’t changed
Observed: large scale buying/selling of index funds means prices do change!
Explain the Grossman-Stiglitz Paradox?
Idea: there cannot be a perfectly informationally efficient market
Why?
In such a market, prices follow a RW, so no one would have incentive to gather information to produce efficiency tf the market would not be efficient! (or maybe investors are irrational?)
Given the evidence against the EMH, a better model might preserve its insights but be a more ‘General Theory’ - might include a behavioral element!
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Why is EMH compatible with small deviations from a RW/anomalies? (2)
Because of transaction costs
Also no reason why all expectations should be the same since investors may these expectations based on the info they have, which varies hugely between them!
Explain why the marginal investor is important?
If a rational agent gathers info until MB=MC, since different agents have different cost functions and different levels of information may -> different expectations!
See notes
Top of side 2
How can Schleifer’s ‘indexing’ result be explained?
With heterogenous preferences
Is it possible to explain all anomalies with heterogenous expectations?
Probably not…eg. extreme share overvaluation, momentum effects, bubbles and crashes etc.
What are the 3 (possible) alternative states of market?
1) Normal functioning EMH-obeying market (fundamental state) (would explain why tests of EMH often fail to reject it!)
2) Bubble (Bull) market (share price > FV, investors buy to sell to next investor at a higher price)
3) Bear market (when bubbles burst)
If, in a bubble market, shares are massively overpriced, why would anyone be holding them?
If any RATIONAL agent were holding them they’d have sold them tf implies they must be being held by irrational agents (ie. noise traders)
What do noise traders do?
They don’t buy and sell based on FVs