Hot Articles

Option Theory Does Not Refute Time Diversification
MF Global and the Meaning of Chutzpah
Einstein's theory....of investing
Where's the Party?
It’s Time for the Plundering of Investors to Stop

Books


Index Funds Book
Index Funds: The 12-Step Program for Active Investors (Hardcover)

by Mark T Hebner
ISBN: 0-9768023-0-9




see more books...

Harry M. Markowitz explains Portfolio Theory: what it is and how it's used from a top-down model from the asset classes to the investments. He covers Standard Deviation, Variance, Correlation, and Covariance. Markowitz also explains what happened in 2008 with Modern Portfolio Theory. (39 Min.)

Harry M. Markowitz - Portfolio Theory and 2008

Mark covers historic recovery patterns and probability of future returns, the risks and returns that come with big government, the role of commodities in your investments, the pros and cons of inflation-hedging securities, and an investment strategy that has been highly successful historically. (92 Min.)

Mark T. Hebner - Big Losses, Big Government and Your Investments

Harry Markowitz gives an IFA Exclusive Presentation on Portfolio Theory Vs. Financial Engineering, and Their Roles in Financial Crises. Markowitz explains the difference between Portfolio Theory and Financial Engineering. Markowitz also covers Black Monday (October 19, 1987), Long Term Capital Management, and Now. (47 Min.)

Harry Markowitz - Portfolio Theory Vs. Financial Engineering, and Their Roles in Financial Crises

The first step on the index funds journey is to recognize active investor behavior. If all investors were lined up in a row, could the active investors be identified? Active investors actively engage in stock picking, time picking (market timing), manager picking, and style picking.

Step 1: Active Investors - Podcast Interview with Mark Hebner

Mark Hebner explains the Nobel Laureates. Mark suggests a higher power of non-biased information from academics who carefully analyze data and have that data peer reviewed before it is published. Mark identifies the five basic concepts of the Modern Portfolio Theory.

Step 2: Nobel Laureates - Podcast Interview with Mark Hebner

see more investing videos...

In The News

The Venture Capital Myth
The Hidden Message in JP Morgan's $2 Billion Loss
The Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation Report on Venture Capital Funds: A Cautionary Tale
Investor Confidence in UBS May be Misplaced
A Rational Response to Irrational Market Anxiety
Mal-location of Capital
Wall Street: the other Las Vegas


Quote of the Week

Sign Up for IFA's Quote of the Week

email:
Will McClatchy
Will McClatchy

Glimpse of "Convergence to Efficiency"

Will McClatchy
Thursday, December 13, 2001

A new study "Evidence on the Speed of Convergence to Market Efficiency" by Prof. Richard Roll of UCLA and colleagues demonstrates just how quickly competition squeezes out easy profits and offers glimpses of the complexity of equity markets.

It is a curious fact that the S&P 500 often sees persistent order imbalances, where purchase orders exceed or undershoot sell orders for many days at a stretch. And yet returns from one day to the next are serially uncorrelated, virtually a random walk. It is very hard to profit from knowledge of yesterday's returns. Clearly trading activities in the middle of each day are removing inefficiencies, but how fast and in what patterns?

It all starts with the actions of investors who pile on orders and create order imbalance, said Roll, whose study with Tarun Chordia of Emory University and Avanidhar Subrahmanyam of UCLA zeroed in on twenty large and twenty mid-cap stocks from 1996 to 1998. Roll recently presented findings to the Super Bowl of Indexing in Phoenix. "Astute traders see where people are going and jump in with countervailing trades," he said. "Initial price pressure is offset increasingly as the day goes on."

This does take time, but not much. Within ten minutes serial correlation of returns is noticeably reduced and continue to drop at 15 and 30 minutes, and by 60 minutes this is no longer information that may be exploited..

This study has something of interest for every type of investment thinker. For the efficient market theory enthusiast, it is an important demonstration of how markets transition from inefficiency to a weak form of efficiency in minutes. The weak form is achieved because at least simple serial correlation does not signal that easy profits can be made:

"The concepts of market efficiency as defined by Fama in his seminal review [1970], weak, semi-strong or strong efficiency represent a road map for statistical tests. They offer little insight about market processes that might deliver the hypothesized phenomena. Clearly, efficiency does not just congeal from spontaneous combustion. It depends, somehow, on individual actions."

For the more concrete investment thinker who prefers to study patterns of competition to understand where arbitrage profits may be had in a particular market, this study suggests that only full-time, professional traders can play the arbitrage game, and even then they had best be fleet of foot.

"Infra-marginal active investors pay to become better informed and somehow move prices enough that passive investors can enjoy a free ride without sacrificing much return (indeed, any return at the margin.)"

For the thinker who prefers to compare markets with evolutionary biology, the study shows unmistakable traces of "hawks" and "doves". The hawks, or traders, can only exist when doves, or apparently naive long-term investors, exist in ample amounts. Hawks work harder at their role but can pick up extra bits of nourishment, and they keep each other in check. "The evolutionary model says there will be a transition to efficient markets," said Roll.

The paper may be viewed in its entirety here.


Share/Save/Bookmark

Related Articles

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Warren Buffett, Market Efficiency and the Disappearance of Alpha

Wednesday, November 20, 2002

ETF Tax Efficiency and Swapping Strategies

Thursday, May 09, 2002

ETF Tax Efficiency Part 2 - In Defense of Index Funds

Tuesday, May 07, 2002

ETF Experts Look at Tax Efficiency

Friday, September 28, 2001

How ETFs Manage a Tax-Efficiency Edge over Traditional Mutual Funds

Login