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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.

Finance 52
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Aswath Damodaran on the Difference Between Pricing a Company and Valuing One, and More

The Motley Fool

Perhaps most seminally, he wrote two books, the first of which was, You Can Be a Stock Market Genius, which I put on the rankings as the best named book of all time. Then another, The Little Book That Beats the Market. People believe markets are efficient, they start to passively invest. What books should I read next?

Companies 246
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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

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Top Funds' Activity in Q1 2023

Pension Pulse

All this is all happening while people say they are downright miserable about the market. Even those who are active investors reflect sentiment at depressed levels. That’s fine, because the dichotomy in fact implies further market gain, says George Smith, portfolio strategist at LPL Research.

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Better Investment: Stocks or Real Estate?

The Motley Fool

Although I think The Motley Fool guys will put it in just as much time and energy as many of the real estate investors should take it very seriously in trying to find that Alpha. Chris Hutchins: There's a question, Matt, you said 10% average returns on the stock market highest returning unlevered asset-class.

Investing 130