Chapter 6: Are Financial Markets Efficient
1) How expectations are formed is important because expectations influence
A) the demand for assets.
B) bond prices.
C) the risk structure of interest rates.
D) the term structure of interest rates.
E) all of the above
2) According to the efficient market hypothesis, the current price of a financial
security
A) is the discounted net present value of future interest payments.
B) is determined by the highest successful bidder.
C) fully reflects all available relevant information.
D) is a result of none of the above
2) According to the efficient market hypothesis, the current price of a financial
security
A) is the discounted net present value of future interest payments.
B) is determined by the highest successful bidder.
C) fully reflects all available relevant information.
D) is a result of none of the above
2) According to the efficient market hypothesis, the current price of a financial
security
A) is the discounted net present value of future interest payments.
B) is determined by the highest successful bidder.
C) fully reflects all available relevant information.
D) is a result of none of the above
2) According to the efficient market hypothesis, the current price of a financial
security
A) is the discounted net present value of future interest payments.
B) is determined by the highest successful bidder.
C) fully reflects all available relevant information.
D) is a result of none of the above
2) According to the efficient market hypothesis, the current price of a
financial security
A) is the discounted net present value of future interest payments.
B) is determined by the highest successful bidder.
C) fully reflects all available relevant information.
D) is a result of none of the above.
3) The efficient market hypothesis
A) is based on the assumption that prices of securities fully reflect all available
information.
B) holds that the expected return on security equals the equilibrium return.
C) both A and B.
D) neither A nor B
4) If the optimal forecast of the return on security exceeds the equilibrium
return, then
A) the market is inefficient.
B) an unexploited profit opportunity exists.
C) the market is in equilibrium.
D) only A and B of the above are true.
E) only B and C of the above are true.
5) According to the efficient market hypothesis
A) one cannot expect to earn an abnormally high return by purchasing a security.
B) information in newspapers and the published reports of financial analysts is
already reflected in market prices.
C) unexploited profit opportunities abound, thereby explaining why so many
people get rich by trading securities.
D) all of the above are true.
E) only A and B of the above are true
6) Another way to state the efficient market condition is that in an efficient
market,
A) unexploited profit opportunities will be quickly eliminated.
B) unexploited profit opportunities will never exist.
C) arbitrageurs guarantee that unexploited profit opportunities never exist.
D) both A and C of the above occur.
7) Another way to state the efficient market hypothesis is that in an efficient
market,
A) unexploited profit opportunities will never exist as market participants, such as
arbitrageurs, ensure that they are instantaneously dissipated.
B) unexploited profit opportunities will not exist for long, as market participants
will act quickly to eliminate them.
C) every financial market participant must be well-informed about securities.
D) only A and C of the above.
8) A situation in which the price of an asset differs from its fundamental
market value is called
A) an unexploited profit opportunity.
B) a bubble.
C) a correction.
D) a mean reversion.
9) A situation in which the price of an asset differs from its fundamental
market value
A) indicates that unexploited profit opportunities exist.
B) indicates that unexploited profit opportunities do not exist.
C) need not indicate that unexploited profit opportunities exist.
D) indicates that the efficient market hypothesis is fundamentally flawed.
10) Studies of mutual fund performance indicate that mutual funds that
outperformed the market in one time period
A) usually beat the market in the next period.
B) usually beat the market in the next two subsequent periods.
C) usually beat the market in the next three subsequent periods.
D) usually do not beat the market in the next period.
11) The efficient market hypothesis suggests that allocating your funds in the
financial markets on the advice of a financial analyst
A) will certainly mean higher returns than if you had made selections by throwing
darts at the financial page.
B) will always mean lower returns than if you had made selections by throwing
darts at the financial page.
C) is not likely to prove superior to a strategy of making selections by throwing
darts at the financial page.
D) is good for the economy.
12) Ivan Boesky, the most successful of the so-called arbs in the 1980s, was
able to outperform the market consistently, indicating that
A) securities markets are not efficient.
B) unexploited profit opportunities were abundant.
C) investors can outperform the market with inside information.
D) only B and C of the above
13) To say that stock prices follow a "random walk" is to argue that
A) stock prices rise, then fall.
B) stock prices rise, then fall predictably.
C) stock prices tend to follow trends.
D) stock prices are, for all practical purposes, unpredictable.
14) To say that stock prices follow a "random walk" is to argue that
A) stock prices rise, then fall, then rise again.
B) stock prices rise, then fall predictably.
C) stock prices tend to follow trends.
D) stock prices cannot be predicted based on past trends
15) Rules used to predict movements in stock prices based on past patterns
are, according to the efficient theory,
A) a waste of time.
B) profitably employed by all financial analysts.
C) the most efficient rules to employ.
D) consistent with the random walk hypothesis
16) Tests used to rate the performance of rules developed in technical analysis
conclude that
A) technical analysis outperforms the overall market.
B) technical analysis far outperforms the overall market, suggesting that
stockbrokers provide valuable services.
C) technical analysis does not outperform the overall market.
D) technical analysis does not outperform the overall market, suggesting that
stockbrokers do not provide services of any value
17) Which of the following types of information will most likely enable the
exploitation of a profit opportunity?
A) Financial analysts' published recommendations
B) Technical analysis
C) Hot tips from a stockbroker
D) Insider information
18) Which of the following types of information will most likely enable the
exploitation of a profit opportunity?
A) Financial analysts' published recommendations
B) Technical analysis
C) Hot tips from a stockbroker
D) None of the above
19) The advantage of a "buy and hold strategy" is that
A) net profits will tend to be higher because there will be fewer brokerage
commissions.
B) losses will eventually be eliminated.
C) the longer a stock is held, the higher its price will be.
D) only B and C of the above are true.
20) The efficient market hypothesis suggests that
A) investors should not try to outguess the market by constantly buying and selling
securities.
B) investors do better on average if they adopt a "buy and hold" strategy.
C) buying into a mutual fund is a sensible strategy for a small investor.
D) all of the above are sensible strategies.
E) only A and B of the above are sensible strategies.
21) Sometimes one observes that the price of a company's stock falls after the
announcement of favorable earnings. This phenomenon is
A) inconsistent with the efficient market hypothesis.
B) consistent with the efficient market hypothesis if the earnings were not as high
as anticipated.
C) consistent with the efficient market hypothesis if the earnings were not as low
as anticipated.
D) the result of none of the above.
23) Although the verdict is not yet in, the available evidence indicates that, for
many purposes, the efficient market hypothesis is
A) a good starting point for analyzing expectations.
B) not a good starting point for analyzing expectations.
C) too general to be a useful tool for analyzing expectations.
D) none of the above
22) Important implications of the efficient market hypothesis include which of
the following?
A) Future changes in stock prices should, for all practical purposes, be
unpredictable.
B) Stock prices will respond to announcements only when the information in these
announcements is new.
C) Sometimes a stock price declines when good news is announced.
D) All of the above.
E) Only A and B of the above.
24) The efficient market hypothesis suggests that
A) investors should purchase no-load mutual funds, which have low management
fees.
B) investors can use the advice of technical analysts to outperform the market.
C) investors let too many unexploited profit opportunities go by if they adopt a
"buy and hold" strategy.
D) only A and B of the above are sensible strategies.
25) The efficient market hypothesis applies to
A) both the stock market and the foreign exchange market.
B) the stock market but not the foreign exchange market.
C) the foreign exchange market but not the stock market.
D) neither the stock market nor the foreign exchange market.
26) According to the January effect, stock prices
A) experience an abnormal price rise from December to January.
B) experience an abnormal price decline from December to January.
C) follow a random walk during January.
D) set the pattern for the entire year in January.
27) The small-firm effect refers to the observation that small firms' stocks
A) follow a random walk but large firms' stocks do not.
B) have earned abnormally low returns given their greater risk.
C) have earned abnormally high returns even taking into account their greater risk.
D) sell for lower prices than do large firms' stocks.
28) The efficient markets hypothesis is weakened by evidence that
A) stock prices tend to follow a random walk.
B) stock prices are more volatile than fluctuations in their fundamental values can
explain.
C) technical analysis does not outperform the overall market.
D) an investment adviser's past success or failure at picking stocks does not predict
his or her future performance.
29) Mean reversion refers to the observation that
A) stock prices overreact to news announcements.
B) Stock prices are more volatile than fluctuations in their fundamental value
would predict.
C) stocks with low returns are likely to have high returns in the future.
D) stocks with low returns are likely to have even lower returns in the future.
30) Which of the following does not weaken the efficient markets hypothesis?
A) Mean reversion
B) Success of buy-and-hold strategy
C) January effect
D) Excessive volatility
31) An important lesson from the Black Monday Crash of 1987 and the tech
crash of 2000 is that
A) factors other than market fundamentals affect stock prices.
B) the strong version of the efficient market hypothesis, that stock prices reflect the
true fundamental value of securities, is correct.
C) market psychology has little if any effect on stock prices.
D) there is no such thing as a rational bubble.
32) An investor gains from short selling by ________ and then later ________.
A) buying a stock; selling it at a higher price
B) selling a stock; buying it back at a lower price
C) buying a stock; selling it at a lower price
D) selling a stock; buying it back at a higher price
33) Which of the following is an insight from behavioral finance?
A) The price of securities fully reflects all available information.
B) Investor overconfidence leads to high trading volumes.
C) The optimal forecast of a security's return equals the security's equilibrium
return.
D) Investment advisers cannot consistently beat the market.
34) Which of the following is empirical evidence indicating that the efficient
market hypothesis may not always be generally applicable?
A) Small-firm effect
B) January effect
C) Market overreaction
D) All of the above
35) An arrangement with a broker to borrow stocks from them and then sell it
in the market, with the hope that they earn a profit by buying the stock back
again after it has fallen in price is called
A) behavioral finance.
B) short sales.
C) smart money.
D) random walk.
36) Evidence in favor of market efficiency includes
A) performance of investment analysts and mutual funds.
B) whether stock prices reflect publicly available information.
C) the random-walk behavior of stock prices.
D) all of the above.
37) Evidence against market efficiency does not include
A) the small-firm effect.
B) technical analysis.
C) excessive volatility.
D) mean reversion.
38) Evidence in favor of market efficiency does not include
A) random-walk behavior.
B) technical analysis.
C) performance of investment analysts and mutual funds.
D) the January effect
39) The elimination of a riskless profit opportunity in a market is called
A) the efficient market hypothesis.
B) random walk.
C) arbitrage.
D) market fundamentals.
True/False.
1. Evidence that stock prices sometimes fall when a firm announces good
news contradicts the efficient market hypothesis.
2. If the security markets are truly efficient, there is no need to pay for
help selecting securities.
3. Evidence that a mutual fund has performed extraordinarily well in the
past contradicts the efficient market hypothesis.
4. Technical analysts look at historical prices for information to project
future prices.
5. The evidence suggests technical analysts are not superior stock pickers.
6. If the markets are efficient, the optimal investment strategy will be to
buy and hold to minimize transaction costs
7. In an efficient market, abnormal returns are not possible, even using
inside information.
8. Short selling" refers to the practice of buying a stock and holding it for
only a short time before selling it.
9. Loss aversion means the unhappiness a person feels when he or she
suffers a monetary loss exceeds the happiness the same person
experiences from receiving a monetary gain of the same amount
10.It is probably a good use of an investor's time to watch as many shows
featuring technical analysts as possible.
11.Having performed well in the past indicates that an investment adviser
or a mutual fund will perform well in the future
12.Technical analysis is a popular technique used to predict stock prices by
studying past stock price data and searching for patterns such as trends
and regular cycles.