Quote from TempusFugit:
Thanks for the reply. I'm always looking for pushback to my idiosyncratic views.
Efficiency does not mean "not-mis-priced" the way I'm using the term. Rather it means that typical investors, on average, will not beat the market.
OK, but that is not typically the accepted definition of what an "efficient" market is. I completely agree with the conclusion that on average the typical investor will not beat the market. I also believe the typical Sunday Joe B-Ball player is not going to beat Michael Jordan, Lebron James, a college starter, or even a star high school player for that matter. That simply is a reflection of the skill of the average participant and totally irrelevant to the question of whether pricing is efficient.
The average market participant (even some pros for that matter) have not mastered control of their own emotions and psychology and therefore will tend to be those who buy high and sell low, as opposed to those who use the alternatives of buy high and sell higher, or buy low and sell high of which I think both are valid. As a result, they are doomed to underperform.
Efficient pricing as the term is used means all information is factored into the current stock price, and that no fundamental analysis, valuation analysis, or technical analysis increases the statistical probability of stock price movement in a particular direction. All current and future information is already in the price and future price movement is purely random and will react to future news which is inherently knowable. There is no such thing as "statistical edge". Frankly, I think that is the biggest pile of horsesh*t there is, and there is actually plenty of evidence to refute that but the efficient market disciples have control over academia.
There is a quite demonstrable and proven value effect to stock prices over long periods of times. Stocks with low P/E, low P/S, and low P/B ratios outperform over long periods of time. There is solid evidence for this. Relative strength and the momentum effect also have a strong body of evidence to support them over a more shorter to intermediate time frame such as 6 months to a year. There is also quite strong evidence coming from the emerging behavioral finance field about human psychological tendencies creating persistent mispricings. Overreaction to bad news and underreaction to good news create some of the inefficiencies mentioned above. Essentially, the above state that over shorter time frames stock prices trend, and over long time frames they mean revert which to me seems quite obvious when you look at multi-year charts.
On the technical side, I believe many technical indicators and analysis work because they are essentially self-fulfilling prophecies. If enough traders believe the 50 day EMA is support, well then, it will be support because they will all be stepping in to buy at that price level. There was also a recent thread somewhere on ET where a study done at MIT was referenced that showed certain price patterns do indeed have positive predictive capacity.
Let's take as a representative body of typical investors....how about mutual fund managers? I bet you will agree that they did not out perform the market (proxy = SPX) during the 1999-00 period you reference. Indeed, I believe the data show they tracked the market, or trailed it slightly, on average. So the market was efficient, but in retrospect clearly wrong. So far, we've just taken the proverbial random walk down wall street.
Actually, I don't agree, and it is because you are oversimplifiying here greatly. First off, you have to do an apples to apples comparison. The SPX is NOT a proxy for the market. It is a proxy for large cap stocks, and really large cap growth at that because it is market cap weighted. You can't compare a small cap value manager to the SPX. Having said that, there is actually strong evidence that many if not most managers outperform their respective indexes and have actual stock picking skill. In small cap, mid cap, and ESPECIALLY international active managers tend to consisently beat their respective indexes. The same does not exist in large cap world but I would submit that most managers running large cap funds are closet indexers. Trust me on that. I know this to be true. You can't beat the index if essentially you've committed yourself to mimicking it minus a few meaningless tweaks here and there. Pull up the 5 largest by AUM large cap funds and compare the holdings to the S&P 500.
One last point, I don't have the reference for the study handy but I'll dig it up if you want me to, but there was a detailed academic study (I think Werner is the author) that showed the average manager's stock picks outperformed but it was the expense ratio of the fund that caused the underperformance relative to the benchmark.
With respect to volatility, the point is not that it is mis-priced but that there is room for options sellers to net positive because options buyers are willing to net negative as they buy their insurance. There is a service component built into the notion of an option -- an exchange of value for risk assumption -- that doesn't exist in a straight equity trade. Equity zero sum; options positive sum.
I must admit I am thoroughly confused by what you are saying here. Typically, options are referred to as a zero sum game. There is ZERO real wealth creation with options. There is no net wealth created. Equities on the other hand are a positive sum game because historically equity prices trend up and represent actual cash flows and dividends of their underlying companies.
I don't believe there is any accuracy to your statement about option sellers being net positive or option buyers being net negative. Either option selling or buying can be delta hedged and there is no reason to believe an inherent premium exists that goes to the option seller. Particular strikes such as OTM puts on OEX may have this characteristic but it would not be universal. With IV levels at current multi-year lows would you argue that option sellers are getting a risk premium for writing options.
Any comment on my first point -- that being long or short vol is not always a directional punt?
I would agree. I spent some time the other day looking at stocks with huge short interests and what happened to IV as they gapped up during an apparent short squeeze and/or stocks making parabolic moves up. IV typically increased during these episodes so it definitely seems possible for IV to increase with positive stock price movement.
