Category: Market Efficiency

  • Transaction Costs and Market Efficiency

    Transaction costs are the costs investors pay when buying or selling securities. These may include brokerage, taxes, bid-ask spread, exchange fees, and other charges.

    High transaction costs can reduce market efficiency because investors may avoid trading even when mispricing exists.

    Example:
    Suppose a stock is trading at ₹500 in one market and ₹508 in another market.

    The price difference is:

    ₹508 – ₹500 = ₹8

    But if the total transaction cost is ₹10 per share, the investor will not trade because the cost is higher than the possible profit.

    Net profit:

    ₹8 – ₹10 = -₹2 per share

    In this case, the price difference may remain because it is not profitable to correct it.

    So, markets are efficient only within the limits of transaction costs.

  • What is an Efficient Market

    An efficient market is a market where asset prices reflect available information quickly and rationally.

    This means that when new information enters the market, investors analyze it, revise their expectations, and trade accordingly. As a result, the price of the asset adjusts to reflect that information.

    In an efficient market, it is difficult for investors to earn abnormal profits consistently because the market price already includes most available information.

    Example:
    Suppose a company stock is trading at ₹500. The company announces that its profit has increased by 25%, which is better than expected. Investors may now believe that the company will generate higher future cash flows.

    As more investors start buying the stock, the price may quickly rise from ₹500 to ₹560. This increase happens because the market has adjusted the stock price based on the new information.

    So, an efficient market does not mean prices are always correct. It means prices respond quickly to information.

  • Why Market Efficiency Is Not the Same Everywhere

    Market efficiency differs across markets, countries, and securities.

    Large and liquid markets are usually more efficient because they have more participants, better disclosure, and lower trading costs. Smaller or less developed markets may be less efficient because information may be limited and trading activity may be low.

    Example:
    A large company may be followed by 60 analysts and thousands of investors. If new information is released, the stock price may adjust within minutes.

    But a small company may be followed by only 2 analysts. If new information is released, the stock price may take days or weeks to adjust.

    This shows that market efficiency is not fixed. It depends on the structure, information flow, participants, and costs in the market.

  • Why Market Efficiency Matters for Investors

    Market efficiency is important because it affects how investors make investment decisions.

    If a market is highly efficient, asset prices already reflect available information. In such a market, it becomes difficult for investors to find undervalued or overvalued securities. This reduces the chances of earning extra returns through analysis alone.

    That is why many investors prefer a passive investment strategy in efficient markets. Passive investing means buying and holding a broad market portfolio instead of trying to beat the market.

    Example:
    Suppose an investor spends ₹20,000 on research and advisory services to select stocks. After one year, the selected stocks generate a return of 11%. During the same period, a market index fund gives a return of 10.5%.

    At first, the active strategy looks better. But after deducting research cost, transaction cost, and management fees, the actual return may fall below the index fund return.

    This shows why passive investing can be preferred when markets are efficient.