Market Indeterminacy
Auteur : Alon Brav
Date de publication : 2003
Éditeur : SSRN
Nombre de pages : 36
Résumé du livre
Quot;Market indeterminacyquot; is the inability to determine whether asset prices are efficient or inefficient, that is, whether or not asset prices fully and immediately reflect available information, such that no investor can earn abnormal expected returns by trading on available information at current prices. Market indeterminacy pervades asset markets because we lack reasonably precise models of quot;correctquot; prices, sometimes called models of quot;fundamental value,quot; against which we can compare observed asset prices to detect efficiency and inefficiency. Arbitrageurs face market indeterminacy as well, so there is little reason to think that professional arbitrage will inevitably drive prices to fundamental values. Market indeterminacy casts doubt on the usefulness of the market efficiency concept in law and policy. For example, contrary to current practice there is insufficient scientific basis to characterize some markets as efficient and others as inefficient for purposes of the fraud-on-the-market theory of securities law. Market indeterminacy also undermines the reliability of event studies as a useful tool to measure the change in quot;fundamental valuequot; at the time of an event, thus rendering event studies undependable in some litigation and policy applications. Finally, market indeterminacy makes it hard to regulate financial markets.