Remove Active Investors Remove Bidding Remove Stock Market
article thumbnail

An introduction to Efficient Market Hypothesis (EMH)

Quiet Growth

The Efficient Market Hypothesis (EMH) is a financial theory that posits that financial markets are “efficient”, meaning that prices reflect all available information at any given time. Market anomalies: EMH doesn’t account for market anomalies such as stock market bubbles and crashes.

article thumbnail

Jerome Powell on "60 Minutes" & Spotify's Latest

The Motley Fool

That investment has historically been four times more volatile than the stock market. If you're a more active investor, you probably want to pay attention to liquidity, which is generally measured by daily volume and the bid-ask spread. Now volatility is not all bad because it measures the ups as well as the downs.

Banks 130
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

Transcript: Eric Balchunas

The Big Picture

My partner, Josh Brown, calls this the “relentless bid.” And — but then the — the — basically, the stock market goes into a bear market. RITHOLTZ: … most of (inaudible) — Warren is an honest steward of active investing. RITHOLTZ: Right. So it’s interesting about the flows to Vanguard.

article thumbnail

A Conversation With John Graham on CPP Investments Fiscal 2023 Results

Pension Pulse

There’s probably more volatility on tap for stock markets, Graham said, adding he’s “cautiously optimistic” about what lies ahead for the fund this year as certain sectors in some parts of the world appear ready to soar. That beat the fund’s reference portfolio (an internal benchmark it sets for itself), which had a return of just 0.1