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ECON 252: Financial Markets

Lecture 07 - Efficient Markets. Initially, Professor Shiller looks back at David Swensen's guest lecture, in particular with respect to the Sharpe ratio as a performance measure for investment strategies. He emphasizes the empirical difficulty to measure the standard deviation, specifically for illiquid asset classes, and elaborates on investment strategies that manipulate the Sharpe ratio. Subsequently, he focuses on the Efficient Markets Hypothesis. This theory states that markets efficiently incorporate all public information, which consequently renders beating the market impossible. For example, technical analysis fails to provide powerful, short-run profit opportunities. A consequence of the Efficient Markets Hypothesis is that stock prices follow a Random Walk, as innovations to the stock price must be solely attributable to news. Professor Shiller contrasts the behavior of a Random Walk with that of a First-Order Autoregressive Process, and concludes that the latter statistical process matches the reality of the stock market more closely. This conclusion, combined with the evidence that investment managers like David Swensen are capable of consistently outperforming the market leads Professor Shiller to the conclusion that the Efficient Markets Hypothesis is a half-truth. (from oyc.yale.edu)

Lecture 07 - Efficient Markets

Time Lecture Chapters
[00:00:00] 1. Swensen's Lecture in Retrospect and Manipulations of the Sharpe Ratio
[00:16:06] 2. History of the Efficient Markets Hypothesis
[00:29:10] 3. Testing the Efficient Markets Hypothesis
[00:40:49] 4. Technical Analysis and the Head and Shoulders Pattern
[00:47:04] 5. Random Walk vs. First-Order Autoregressive Process as Stock Price Model

References
Lecture 7 - Efficient Markets
Instructor: Professor Robert J. Shiller. Resources: Multiple-Choice Quiz [PDF]. Transcript [html]. Audio [mp3]. Download Video [mov].

Go to the Course Home or watch other lectures:

Lecture 01 - Introduction and What this Course Will Do for You and Your Purposes
Lecture 02 - Risk and Financial Crises
Lecture 03 - Technology and Invention in Finance
Lecture 04 - Portfolio Diversification and Supporting Financial Institutions
Lecture 05 - Insurance, the Archetypal Risk Management Institution, its Opportunities and Vulnerabilities
Lecture 06 - Guest Speaker David Swensen
Lecture 07 - Efficient Markets
Lecture 08 - Theory of Debt, Its Proper Role, Leverage Cycles
Lecture 09 - Corporate Stocks
Lecture 10 - Real Estate
Lecture 11 - Behavioral Finance and the Role of Psychology
Lecture 12 - Misbehavior, Crises, Regulation and Self Regulation
Lecture 13 - Banks
Lecture 14 - Guest Speaker Maurice "Hank" Greenberg
Lecture 15 - Forward and Futures Markets
Lecture 16 - Guest Speaker Laura Cha
Lecture 17 - Options Markets
Lecture 18 - Monetary Policy
Lecture 19 - Investment Banks
Lecture 20 - Professional Money Managers and their Influence
Lecture 21 - Exchanges, Brokers, Dealers, Clearinghouses
Lecture 22 - Public and Non-Profit Finance
Lecture 23 - Finding your Purpose in a World of Financial Capitalism