Samuelson has received the <u>Nobel Prize</u> for his <b>martingale theory</b> to justify <b>EMH</b> (Efficient Market Hypothesis). The implication of his theory is that at every moment the market's price is equal to the <b>fundamental price</b>. For many years it was believed that the <b>fundamental price</b> was equal to the <b>discounted cash flow of dividends</b> which is the <u>pilar of finance</u>. Then many academic researchers tested this hypothesis and found that market's price was far from following the fundamental price's law, only after a very long time market would revert to the <b>fundamental price</b> refered above. That's how they pretend that market is still efficient. But as Mandelbrott has pointed out (I translate from french) "according to the datas of Prince Omar Toussoun, the transitional phase of the Nile has been lasting for at least one thousand years. A transition phase that lasts so long and which nobody knows towards what value it tends should not be qualified as temporary !". So most academics now agree on the facts but they don't agree on the definition. But definition is pure convention, a "cat" in english is "chat" in french but "chat" in english has not the same meaning than the one in french. So saying that market is efficient or inefficient, if the definition is not the same in the two cases, is ridiculous debate since it's a debate about convention and not about the phenomena.
[To be continued...]
[To be continued...]
