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Title: Money, Banking


1
Money, Banking FinanceLecture 2
  • The Stock Market, Rational Expectations and
    Efficient Markets

2
Aims
  • Explain the theory of valuing stocks.
  • Explore how expectations influence affect the
    value of stocks.
  • Understand the theory of rational expectations
  • Understand the concept of the Efficient Markets
    Hypothesis

3
Common Stock
  • Common stock is the principal way that listed
    companies raise equity capital.
  • Common stock holders have an ownership interest
    in the enterprise in the form of a bundle of
    rights.
  • The right to vote at the AGM. The right to be the
    residual claimant of all cash flows into the
    company. The right to sell stock.
  • Dividends are paid quarterly or six monthly

4
One period valuation
  • An analyst makes a forecast for the price of a
    particular stock.
  • Does the current price accurately reflect the
    Analysts forecast?
  • Need to discount the expected future cash flow.
  • This is a one-period model where P0 current
    price of the stock
  • P1 the price of the stock in the next period
  • D1 the dividend paid at the end of next period.
  • ke required return on investments in equity

5
One period valuation
6
Generalised dividend valuation model
7
Dividend Model
  • The price of a stock depends only on the
    discounted flow dividend payments.
  • Some dont pay out a dividend and so the
    valuation is based on the expectation of
    dividends to be paid out some time.
  • Some stock are zero dividend stocks. Valuation is
    based on expected capital gain.

8
Dividend growth
  • Valuation of stocks is based on expected dividend
    stream
  • Difficult to estimate.
  • Many companies aim to increase dividends at a
    constant stream each year.
  • Let g the expected constant growth in dividends.

9
Gordon growth model
10
Gordon growth model continued
11
Assumptions and Implications
  • Dividends are assumed to continue growing at a
    constant rate forever.
  • The growth rate is assumed to be less than the
    required return on equity.
  • We can see how this model can be applied to the
    setting of stock prices.
  • Let expected dividend payout next year be 2 per
    share. Market analysts expect firm growth to be
    3 but there is uncertainty about the constancy
    of the dividend stream.
  • To compensate for the higher risk the required
    rate of return is 15 for investor A
  • Investor B has researched industry insiders and
    is more confident and therefore has a required
    rate of 12.
  • Investor C has inside information and feels that
    10 is acceptable to compensate for risk.

12
Stock prices setting
  • Investor A valuation 2/(.15-.03)16.67
  • Investor B valuation 2/(.12-.0322.22
  • Investor C valuation 2/(.10-.0328.57
  • If investor A holds stock, he/she would sell it
    to C. The market price would depend on which
    investor holds the stock, how much stock and the
    market orders for the stock.

13
Implications
  • Expectations about the firm changes as new
    information is made available.
  • Expectations of future dividends or growth will
    affect investor valuations.
  • Interest rates affect the market valuation of
    stock prices.
  • When interest rates are lowered the rate on bonds
    (and other safe assets) decline. As these are
    substitutes to equity, the required return on
    equities decline also and drive up stock prices.
  • Lower rates also stimulate the economy and help
    the real economy to expand which also helps firms
    and raise stock prices.

14
Risk and Return
  • Expected return of a share is the sum of the
    earnings per share and expected percentage
    capital gain.
  • For example if the current price of a share is
    100 and the expected price of the share in one
    years time is 114 and the dividend is 3.
  • The expected return is (114-100)/100 3/100
    17
  • But in this exercise the expectation will not be
    held by all people or the expectation will be
    state-conditional.
  • A distribution of estimates of expected return
    will exist based on differing information state
    contingency

15
Expected return
16
Example
  • The current price of a common stock is 100
  • State contingency is, good, average, bad
  • Expected future price in each state is, 128,117,
    105 respectively
  • Expected dividends are, 7, 3, 0 respectively
  • The state contingent expected returns are
    (128-100)7/1000.35 (117-100)3/100.2
    (105-100)0100.05.
  • Probability of each state 0.3, 0.4, 0.3.

17
Expected return over all contingencies
18
Calculation of expected return and risk
  • E(r) (35x0.3) (20x0.4) (5x0.3) 20
  • Variance of returns calculation
  • (35)2x(0.3) (20)2x(0.4) (5)2x(0.3)
    (20)2 535 400 135.
  • Standard deviation v135 11.62
  • This is an example of three contingencies only

19
Distribution of returns
Frequency
Return
- Return
0
E(r)
20
Expectations
  • Stock price valuation depends on expectations
  • But how are expectations formed?
  • One model of expectations formation is the theory
    of rational expectations.
  • John Muth Expectations will be identical to
    optimal forecasts (the best guess of the future)
    using all available information

21
Optimal forecast
  • Rational expectation is the optimal forecast
    using all the available information but the
    forecast will not always be right.
  • Why? Each forecast has an error that is given by
    all the possible outcomes.
  • But it will be an optimal forecast meaning it
    will be unbiased.
  • Unbiasedness means that there is no bias in any
    forecast.

22
Rational Expectation
23
Implications of RE theory
  • 1. If there is a change in the way a variable
    moves, the way in which expectations of this
    variable are formed will change as well.
  • 2. The forecast errors will on average be zero
    and cannot be predicted ahead of time.

24
If information set ? changes then expectations
of X changes
25
Forecast errors are on average zero
26
Concepts of efficiency
  • Economics provides concepts of efficiency
    allocative and operational efficiency
  • An allocationally efficient market is one where
    prices are determined where market demand equals
    market supply.
  • An operationally efficient market is one where
    transactions costs of moving resources around are
    zero. Eg perfect capital markets

27
Efficient Capital Markets
  • Efficient markets in finance is less restrictive
    than the concept of perfect capital markets.
  • In an efficient capital market, prices fully and
    instantaneously reflect all available relevant
    information informationally efficient.
  • A capital market may be informationally efficient
    but not allocatively or operationally efficient.
    E.g. imperfect competition (allocatively
    inefficient) or transactions costs like the
    proposed Tobin tax (operationally inefficient).

28
Efficient Markets Hypothesis
  • Expectations are unobserved and we need
    expectations of future stock price to calculate
    expected return.
  • The theory of rational expectations tells us that
    expectations are the optimal forecasts based on
    all the available information.
  • The supply and demand for securities will
    determine an equilibrium price of securities
    therefore the expected price of stocks will be
    given by the market equilibrium.
  • The expected return on a security will equal the
    equilibrium return given by the market conditions
    for that particular security.

29
Weak form efficiency
  • Weak form efficiency no investor can earn
    excess returns by developing trading rules based
    on historical price/returns data. So technical
    analysis or chartists rules cannot beat the
    market.
  • All past information is reflected in the spot
    price of an asset.

30
Semi-strong form efficiency
  • No investor can earn excess returns from trading
    rules based on any publicly available
    information.
  • Implication is that all publicly available
    information is fully reflected in the actual
    asset price.
  • Market reaction to new publicly available
    information is instantaneous and unbiased. No
    over- or under-reaction. Fundamental analysis
    based on publicly available information shouldnt
    result in abnormal returns.

31
Strong form efficiency
  • No investor can earn excess returns using any
    information public or private.
  • Strong form efficiency implies that all
    information is fully reflected in the price of
    the asset.
  • Even private information! Insider trading is
    ineffective

32
Implication of EMH
  • Let equilibrium return for stock A is 10.
  • The current price Pt is lower than the optimal
    forecast price Pot1 so that the optimal forecast
    return is actually 50.
  • This has created an unexploited profit
    opportunity.
  • So investors buy more stock A and drive up the
    current price relative to expected future price
    thus lowering the optimal forecast return to
    equal the equilibrium return.
  • Vice versa if the current price was above the
    expected future price.
  • In an efficient market all unexploited profits
    are eliminated.
  • Not all investors have to be informed or have
    rational expectations for the price to be driven
    to its equilibrium point.

33
Evidence in favour of EMH
  • Empirical studies confirm that stock pickers or
    mutual fund managers cannot outperform the market
    over a long period of time.
  • The EMH states that stock prices reflect all
    available information so that earnings
    announcements that are already known will not
    affect stock prices when the announcements are
    made. Only new news causes stock prices to
    change.
  • Future changes in stock prices should follow a
    random walk (future changes in prices are
    unpredictable).

34
Random Walk-assume expected dividend stream is
constant
35
Random Walk
  • Since the expectation of Pt conditional on
    information at time t is simply itself Pt.
  • The difference between expected dividends in t1
    given information at time t and dividends in t2
    given information at time t1 is new news and
    is therefore unpredictable. Hence its expectation
    is ZERO.

36
Random Walk
37
Empirical evidence against EMH
  • Size effect Empirical studies show that small
    firms earn abnormal returns over long periods.
  • January effect studies have confirmed an
    abnormal price rise from December to January.
  • Market overreaction over/under shooting
    following new news.
  • Excessive volatility fluctuations in stock
    prices are greater than the fluctuations in the
    fundamentals.
  • Mean reversion low returns stock tend to be
    followed by high returns and vice versa. Stocks
    that have done poorly in the past tend to do
    better in the future. But the evidence on this
    is controversial.
  • Lag in effect of new news stock prices do not
    always react to news instantly. Some evidence of
    autocorrelation.
  • If capital markets are informationally efficient,
    why is there so much between people that take
    different views about the same future.

38
Behavioural Finance
  • Doubts about EMH particularly after the stock
    market crash of 1987 (and probably 2008) have led
    to the emergence of a new field in finance.
  • Applies psychology, social anthropology and
    sociology to understand the behaviour of stock
    markets.
  • One of the arguments of EMH is that unexploited
    profit is eliminated by knowledgeable investors.
    For this to happen they must engage in short
    selling.
  • Short selling borrowing the stock from brokers
    and then sell it in the market with the aim of
    making a profit by buying the stock back at a
    lower price.
  • Psychologists suggest that people are subject to
    loss aversion. They are more unhappy from
    losses than happy with equivalent gains. Because
    the potential losses can be huge from short
    selling in reality short selling occurs only in
    special circumstances.
  • Psychologists also find that people tend to be
    overconfident in their own judgements.
    Overconfidence and social contagion explain the
    creation of speculative bubbles.

39
The final say?
  • Observing correctly that the market was
    frequently efficient they academics, investment
    professionals, corporate mangers went on to
    conclude incorrectly that it was always
    efficient Warren Buffet
  • Economics is not so much the Queen of the social
    sciences but the servant, and needs to base
    itself on anthropology, psychology and the
    sociology of ideologies John Kay (FT 7/10/09)

40
Summary
  • The theory of stock market valuation
  • Expectations govern the valuation of stocks.
  • Different expectations result in different
    expected returns and a distribution of expected
    capital gains.
  • The theory of rational expectations provides a
    market equilibrium basis for expectations based
    on available information.
  • The EMH is the application of rational
    expectations to the securities market.
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