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efficient market hypothesis
market prices fully reflect all available information about an investment so that market prices represent very good estimates of intrinsic value
market efficiency
the degree to which market prices reflect all available, relevant information, so as to reflect the intrinsic value of the investment
weak form market efficiency
market prices already reflect all information contained in the history of past trading (such as past prices and trading volume)
semi strong form market efficiency
market prices already reflect all publicly available information (such as financial statement data)
strong form market efficiency
market prices already reflect all relevant information including inside information (such as private information)
random walk
changes in the price of a stock are random and unpredictable because (1) prices only depend on new information due to competition and (2) new information is unpredictable and random
passive portfolio management
an investment strategy that purchases a well-diversified portfolio that (1) has minimal buying and selling, (2) holds the portfolio for a long time, and (3) does not attempt to find good investment opportunities
active portfolio management
an investment strategy that attempts to find good investment opportunities by (1) using various types of analysis, (2) has frequent buying and selling, and (3) has the goal of outperforming the "average investor"
beating the market
achieving an investment return that exceeds the performance of the average stock portfolio over a long period of time
mispricing
when the market price of an investment differs from its intrinsic value, often due to incorrect or incomplete information, investor sentiment, or other market inefficiencies
financial market bubble
a rapid escalation in the market price of an investment to levels significantly above its intrinsic value