1 / 18

Chapter 7: Rational Expectations, Efficient Markets, and the Valuation of Corporate Equities

Chapter 7: Rational Expectations, Efficient Markets, and the Valuation of Corporate Equities. Chapter Objectives Explain when expectations are rational and when they are irrational. Explain how corporate equities (stocks, shares of a corporation) are valued.

Download Presentation

Chapter 7: Rational Expectations, Efficient Markets, and the Valuation of Corporate Equities

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 7: Rational Expectations, Efficient Markets, and the Valuation of Corporate Equities Chapter Objectives • Explain when expectations are rational and when they are irrational. • Explain how corporate equities (stocks, shares of a corporation) are valued. • Explain what is meant by the term market efficiency. • Describe the ways in which financial markets are efficient. • Describe the ways in which financial markets are inefficient.

  2. 1. The Theory of Rational Expectations • Market volatility: Constantly changing prices of financial instruments • Rational expectations: An economic theory that posits that, in this case investors, input all available relevant information into the best forecasting model available

  3. 1. The Theory of Rational Expectations • Economic fundamentals: Key variables in the pricing of assets • They include expected inflation, interest, default, and earnings rates • Investors: Participants in financial markets; purchasers of financial securities

  4. …expectations, rather than actualities, move prices… People invest based on what they believe the future will bring, not on what the present brings or the past has wrought, though they often look to the present and past (sometimes even the distant past) for clues about the future. That is invest on expectations and trade on realizations.

  5. …investor expectations will be the best guess of the future using all available information. If everyone’s expectations are rational, then why don’t investors agree on how much assets are worth? • Investors have different sets of information available to them (some have inside information, news that is unknown outside a small circle) • Investors think differently of common information because their utility functions, their goals and aspirations, differ. • Investors use different valuation models, or different theories of how to predict fundamentals and how fundamentals determine securities prices. • Investors understand the effect of news more quickly and clearly.

  6. Ownership means that investors are residual claimants • Generally, they are entitled to one vote per share. Exceptions include classified shares • May or may not pay Dividends - Cash distributions of corporate earnings to shareholders • When valuing corporate equities, what matters is earnings or profits (expected or not??)

  7. In the Gordon growth model, a corporate equity is worth the discounted present value of its expected future earnings stream P = E(1 + g)/(k – g) Where, P= price today E = most recent earnings k = required return g = constant growth rate

  8. The market’s valuation, given the information available at that moment, is always correct • In other words, a good, including a financial security, is worth precisely what the market says it is worth

  9. Prices of similar securities track each other closely over time • Prices of the same security are identical in different markets If not, arbitrage, or the riskless profit opportunity that arises when the same security at the same time has different prices in different markets, would take place. The size of price differences and the speed with which arbitrage opportunities are closed depend on the available technology. Example: making money on B/T

  10. Hedge fund: A type of relatively unregulated mutual fund that engages in sophisticated trading strategies • Only wealthy individuals and institutional investors are allowed to invest directly in such funds

  11. Portfolio diversification: Entails investing in a relatively large number of issuers within an asset class, such as buying the shares of hundreds of corporations rather than just one or a few in order to reduce return risk • Some of the investments will go sour, others will flourish, and most will fall in between • Sectoral asset allocation: Entails investing in a variety of different asset classes consistent with the investor’s goals and lifecycle stage

  12. 4. Evidence of Market Efficiency Securities prices • Securities prices in efficient markets are determined by fundamentals: • Interest rates • Inflation • Profit expectations • Their direction, up or down, in the next period is random, because relevant news cannot be systematically predicted • Securities markets are as efficient as can be, given available information

  13. Securities markets are as efficient as can be, given available information. 4. Evidence of Market Efficiency Securities markets

  14. Some markets are more efficient than others • Labor and services markets are the least efficient of all • Markets for education, health care, and custom construction services are also highly inefficient, probably due to high levels of asymmetric information

  15. The most important example of financial market inefficiencies are so-called asset bubbles or manias, not necessarily irrational, but certainly inefficient: • misallocation of resources as prices rise and • unexploited profit opportunities as prices fall

  16. Thousands of bubbles have arisen throughout human history, typically when assets: • Can be purchased with cheap, borrowed money • Attract the attention of numerous, inexperienced traders • Cannot be easily “sold short” (when nobody can profit from the declining price) • Are subject to high levels of moral hazard due to the expectation of a bailout • Are subject to high agency costs • Agricultural commodities (e.g. tulips) have experienced bubbles most frequently

  17. Observed less-than-rational behaviors: Loss Aversion Overconfidence Representativeness Conservatism Belief Perseverance Anchoring Availability Bias Ambiguity Aversion “To the extent that a man is guided by his rational judgment, he acts in accordance with the requirements of his nature and, to that extent, succeeds in achieving a human form of survival and well-being; to the extent that he acts irrationally, he acts as his own destroyer.” -- Ayn Rand, "What Is Capitalism?”Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal

  18. Short selling: Selling a stock or other asset at a high price and buying it back later at a lower price • It is the logical equivalent of buying low and selling high, but many investors don’t attempt it • Transparency: In general, the opposite of opacity • In this context, transparency means a relatively low degree of asymmetric information

More Related