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Preliminary communication

https://doi.org/10.3326/fintp.36.1.3

The efficient market hypothesis: problems with interpretations of empirical tests

Denis Alajbeg ; Zagreb School of Economics and Management
Zoran Bubaš orcid id orcid.org/0000-0002-0246-244X ; Zagreb School of Economics and Management
Velimir Šonje ; Arhivanalitika ; Zagreb School of Economics and Management


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Abstract

Despite many “refutations” in empirical tests, the efficient market hypothesis (EMH) remains the central concept of financial economics. The EMH’s resistance to the results of empirical testing emerges from the fact that the EMH is not a falsifiable theory. Its axiomatic definition shows how asset prices would behave under assumed conditions. Testing for this price behavior does not make much sense as the conditions in the financial markets are much more complex than the simplified conditions of perfect competition, zero transaction costs and free information used in the formulation of the EMH. Some recent developments within the tradition of the adaptive market hypothesis are promising regarding development of a falsifiable theory of price formation in financial markets, but are far from giving assurance that we are approaching a new formulation. The most that can be done in the meantime is to be very cautious while interpreting the empirical evidence that is presented as “testing” the EMH.

Keywords

efficient market hypothesis; financial market effiency

Hrčak ID:

78284

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/78284

Publication date:

13.3.2012.

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