Monday, October 14, 2013
The Market Is Efficient, Or It Isn't, Wins Nobel Prize
The Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences was awarded
today to Eugene Fama, Robert Shiller and Lars Peter Hansen. By now you
are aware of Eugene Fama, one of the earliest and most vocal proponents
of stock market efficiency. Fama's research centered around testing for
market efficiency and attacks on market efficiency.
What is interesting about this year's Nobel Prize is that Robert
Shiller is a proponent of behavioral finance, arguing that markets are
often inefficient. He is known for predicting the housing bubble
and has argued that while the stock market may exhibit random price
fluctuations in the short term, it is predictable over three to five
year periods. As is noted by Nobel Laureate Robert Solow, the award this year is a little like an award to both the Yankees and Red Sox.