Citation
Md Nassir, Annuar
(1991)
The Efficient Market Hypothesis and the Thinly Traded Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange: Tests with Appropriate Refinements.
Masters thesis, Universiti Pertanian Malaysia.
Abstract
Studies on the Efficient Market Hypothesis (EMH) in both
the developed and developing capital markets have revealed
mixed evidence. EMH presupposes an ability to detect
incorrectly priced securities and profitable arbitraging
opportunities which move the market towards efficiency. The
early empirical work on developed securities markets purported to provide evidence that securities market prices are unbiased in their reaction to relevant information. This means that investors cannot consistently profit from any delays in price adjustment reflecting new information. However, evidence from subsequent studies, in the early
1980s, have not reached such cons is tent conclusion. These
studies show anomalous price behaviour in securities markets:
among others, size effects, turn of the year effects, week- end effects, etc., which are argued by some as evidence of market inefficiencies.
The Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange (KLSE) being small and
illiquid provides a suitable setting to evaluate the EMH in a thinly traded scenario . In prior studies on market efficiency
of the KLSE, no attempt was made to control for market
thinness. In order to control for market thinness, ten
portfolio deciles of KLSE listed stocks which differ in the
degree of market thinness were created. The standardised volume
of trading was proxied as a suitable indicator for measuring
market thinness.
Three tests were performed to evaluate the weak- form
efficiency of the KLSE : (i) Q - statistic which measures
the average serial correlations, (ii) individual serial
correlations analysis (for 12 lags) and (iii) unit roots analysis.
Test results on six equally-weighted dividend-distributed
industry sector portfolios, two existing indices (namely
the KLSE Composite Index and the New Straits Times (NST)
Industrial Index) and an equally - weighted market ·portfolio (Rmt ) indicate that the KLSE Composite, the NST Indus trial and the two industry sec tors (hotel and tin sectors) exhibit
average serial correlations cons is tent with weak- form
efficiency. Results on the ten portfolios which differ on
the degree of market thinness showed that all except
three exhibit average serial correlations consistent with
weak-form efficiency. For individual serial correlation
results, 90 percent of the 30 component stocks of the NST
Indus trial Index showed price behaviour consistent with random walk or weak- form efficiency.
A unit root test was applied using a sample of stocks
from each of the ten portfolio deciles. The Dickey-Fuller
test of significance suggested that current prices are the best
estimates of future prices. An average of 87 percent of the
current price behaviour is explained by the immediate price
lag variable.
To evaluate the semi- strong form efficiency, an
infrequently traded sample (Sample One) and a frequently traded
sample (Sample Two) of annual earnings and dividend changes
were used to study price react ions to information arrival.
Three methods were used to estimate the residual returns: the
market adjusted returns, the risk-adjusted returns and the
risk-adjusted returns incorporating the Dimson, Fowler and
Rorke (DFR) corrections for thin trading bias.
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